Professional Development report

During my first year of studies at DID I realized how many things I learned and how many things that I still need to learn before arriving or at least being a little bit closer to the level of the people that made the history of Graphic Design. When I started this year, my idea of Graphic Design was “I will be learning how to use Illustrator and Photoshop and will start creating my own things”. My idea of Graphic Design was very much limited only to the technical skills required for this profession, without having any clear idea of it. In fact, with this in mind, I have always tried to learned graphic design tools by my own, following tutorials on the Internet.

By attending the lectures day by day, I discovered that there is a whole world that stands under the word “Graphic Design” and how this changed over the years. I learned how to generate creative ideas before arriving to the actual development of it, and the final piece it is not necessarily required to be done through computer graphic tools, it can be drawn, crafted, painted etc…I discovered there are different number of professions that exists in this field, some of which I feel close to what I like doing some of which I don’t. I have always had interest in Illustration and photography, but I discovered to have interest in Typography as well. I didn’t know you could build a profession as typographer.
By following my interest I started making some research on these professions and reporting the skills required to pursue a career path in one of these:

Typographer
A typographer is person that create a typeface that reflects the message that is intended to be communicated.
The skills required for this field consists in learning the fundamentals and history of typefaces as well as having a distinctive design skills.
The main career opportunities for typographers are found in publishing companies, advertising agencies and printing establishments. For example Book publishers call the typographer to create a design for book covers and book promotional materials. Visual effects plays an important role in product branding.

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Helvetica

I have interest in typefaces that are clean and readable such as Helvetica inspired by the Swiss typography.

Illustrator
An illustrator is a person who specializes in enhancing writing or elucidating concepts by providing a visual representation that corresponds to the content of the associated text or idea. The illustration may be intended to clarify complicated concepts or objects that are difficult to describe textually. There are different types of illustrators and their work depends on the field they work in. There are children’s book illustrators, medical illustrators, scientific illustrators, technical illustrators and others. There are several different skills required for this profession:

  • good drawing skills and IT skills;
  • an eye for detail and design;
  • to be good at communicating and negotiating with clients and colleagues;
  • self-promotional skills.

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Malika Favre – Illustration

One of my favourite Illustrator is Malika Favre, she is a French artist based in London. Her work are characterized by the use of: bold colours, minimal style, positive negative space.

Photographer
Photographers create photographic or digitally manipulated images to illustrate the subject matter of publications. They may also source images, so need a working knowledge of what constitutes a good image.
Being a photographer requires the following qualities and skills:

  • Artistic;
  • Good communicator;
  • Enjoys working with people;
  • Outgoing;
  • Observant;
  • Business skills;
  • Creative;

I have always loved amateur photography and wouldn’t mind combining the love of photography with on of the profession above, such as the use of text on a edited photograph to convey a particular message and create a poster etc.

Typography Evolution
All of the different careers listed above have evolved over time, if think of a typography there are a variety of printing techniques that designers can use to solve problems and create visual materials. Some are older than others, some are not as easily available as they used to be. Wood Block printing is one of the oldest techniques for printing and has a long history or development in both Europe and Asia.
Graphic designers these days have an endless number of tools and modern technology to create a wide range of typographic styles and even entire families of font families and typefaces. By having the knowledge of typographic history, graphic designers can expand their horizons and enhance their skills to produce a much more refined body of work. From ancient typographic styles to classic movable type, the history of typography can help designers develop more cohesive style that builds on the past. There is so much to learn from the past, and so much inspiration to be discovered.

Professional Development Plan

Self skills audit

By nature I am person that never stops in front of things that has to deal with for the very first time. This is something that I always dealt with in all of my jobs, sometimes you are assigned to projects for which you don’t have enough experience and skills, but I see those things as opportunity to learn something new that adds value to your personal and professional development. I consider my self to be a very versatile person, with good technical skills, related to digital tools since I have always been very keen towards the world of computer science and internet. Even if I don’t have any professional experience in Graphic design, some of the professional skills acquired through my jobs can still be applied to this sector as well: organization, time management, research. In addition to this, skills acquired at this first year at DID to pursue a career in the Graphic design are: exploring ideas or ideas generation, creativity, project management, presentation, team work, brainstorming.

By looking at the different professions that I am interested in, I started doing a SWOT analysis of what are my current Strengths, Weaknesses and skills that I need to improve.

  • Organization;
  • Dedication;
  • Time management;
  • Using basic Photoshop and Illustrator;
  • Collaboration;
  • Cooperation;
  • Idea exchange;
  • Curiosity;
  • Versatility;
  • Optimism;
  • Analysis;
  • Self-motivation;
  • Initiative;
  • Persistence;
  • Mind mapping;
  • Experimenting;
  • Commitment;
  • Teamwork;
  • Responsibility;
  • Patience;
  • Empathy;
  • Lack of knowledge of the Graphic design sector;
  • Lack of knowledge of different Graphic design techniques;
  • No connection with the graphic design history;
  • Volunteering in industry bodies;
  • Networking attending workshops;
  • Develop some self-promotional skills;
  • Create some own small projects for the portfolio;
  • I procrastinate things that could be done in a very small time;
  • Be a good communicator;

I created a short terms 6 weeks plan in relation to the assignments and personal goals that I wanted to achieve:

  • Setup of the Blog and make a post a week;
  • Follow tutorials on the internet for WordPress learning;
  • Read the “Graphic Design” history assignment ahead the class and make a further research on a topic of interest;
  • Review the blog post after in class discussion;
  • Research on the professions of interest
  • Research – Influence of propaganda poster in the political commentary
  • Partecipate more in class discussion with the aim of improving my communication skills
  • Buy a book on Graphic Design history to improve my personal knowledge

Week 1 – I set up my personal Blog on WordPress. Even if I had a previous experience with WordPress this version was different from the one that I used to. This made me realized that you need to keep yourself updated with the latest technologies if you are planning to have an online portfolio or using digital tools in your work.

Week 2 – I started making my first posts on the Blog. In class we discussed about the Russian Constructivism and we were split into groups and asked to develop a Poster on the basis of the article that were assigned. Aine and I started with some brainstorming and created a first sketch draft in class and then we finished the piece at home. The brainstorming phase and the communication between me and Aine worked well since both of us were listening to each other ideas and satisfied of the final poster, it was as we wanted it to be.

Week 3 – In class we discussed about the Bauhaus era, we were split into groups I worked with Louise and both of us contributed in the discussion with our personal research as well. I realized that I feel more comfortable in discussing things that I know well. I started making the research on the report that I needed to complete for the Unit 2 assignment. I picked the “Influence of propaganda poster in the political commentary – Brexit”. I made a lot of research by looking at different articles of that period, I searched for different source for images. I wanted my article to be sustained by reliable data and sources, I felt this last part to be a bit difficult to find.

Week 4 – I missed the class in this week but I read the assignment and published my post. I followed more tutorial for WordPress in order to be able to set up the features that I wanted in my articles (such as the labeling of images, adding of references) As per my 6 weeks planning, ordered the book on the Graphic Design history that goes from 1960s to current years, since I want to achieve a better knowledge of different styles from which I can also take inspiration.

Week 5 – After the feedback from in class session from the teacher on my posts, I reviewed some of the articles.
I put some long term goals such as the development of at least 2 projects to put in my e-portfolio in the coming 3 months; finish the typeface that I started of one of assignment in Term 2 by the end of the year. Attending workshops,

Week 6

References

Design History

Printmag – The Evolution of Typography

Graphic Design Degree Hub

Creative Pool

Malika Favre

Influence of propaganda poster on political commentary today – Brexit

UK Brexit Referendum of 2016 led the victory for the “Leave” campaign, with a total of 51.9% of the vote.
The result provoked an important debate as to the factors that contributed to the victory, with various theories and explanations.

Presentational factors during the campaign appear to be in the above list.
Campaigning in the United Kingdom European Union membership referendum began unofficially on 20 February 2016 when Prime Minister David Cameron formally announced under the terms of the European Union Referendum Act 2015 that a referendum would be held on the issue of the United Kingdom’s membership of the European Union. The official campaign period for the 2016 referendum ran from 15 April 2016 until the day of the poll on 23 June 2016.
At the close of applications on 31 March only Britain Stronger in Europe had applied to the Electoral Commission for the official “remain” designation. Three competing applications were submitted for the official “leave” designation. The Electoral Commission announced the designated campaign groups for the leave and remain sides on 13 April 2016, two days before the official ten-week campaign period began.

  • Designated official leading Remain campaigning group: Britain Stronger in Europe
  • Designated official leading Leave campaigning group: Vote Leave

In this article I will try to make analysis of …the during the Brexit campaign for “Leave” and “Remain”.

Leave Campaign
The “Leave” campaign was primarily based on two issues related to sovereignty and migration. The two major players involved in the Leave campaign were the UK Independence Party (UKIP) and Vote Leave. During the referendum, Vote Leave sent a huge number of targeted social media messages. One of the most discussed Leave campaign propaganda that UKIP was condemned for it is “Breaking Point” billboard, that shows a large queue of desperate refugees trying to reach Europe.

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Breaking Point : The EU has failed us all – Leave Campaign

The photograph used in the poster is of migrants moving from one border to another in Slovenia, not coming to the UK. But its intention was not to be accurate; the aim of the poster was to evoke fear of an uncontrollable mass of people. This can be interpreted also as, these migrants are coming to the UK so the borders should be taken under control.

“Breaking Point: the EU failed us all” poster gained attention with multiple people during the campaign, pointing out that it resembled to the Nazi propaganda.

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In fact if we compare this poster to a BBC documentary being shown on Netflix called “Auschwitz: Nazis and final solution” similarties are inevitable. The documentary discussed about the suffering that were endured by Soviet Jews as the Nazis moved east.

Polling data reveal a particularly interesting fact on this: Those who voted Leave had the least exposure to migrants, while those with the most exposure to them were most likely to vote Remain. It was stated that is was the fear of immigration, not immigration itself, which led the Leave camp to victory — not the reality of migrants, but the idea of them.

During the Leave campaign many other flyers were produced that had the aim to create anxiety about immigration, an example is the following:

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Countries set to join the EU – Leave Campaign flyer

The above Vote Leave flyer was distributed in homes of millions of British accross the UK. This displays a map of the EU represented in different shades of grey with UK rendered in Black, the countries that are numbered from 1 to 5 – Albania, Macedonia, Montenegro, Serbia and Turkey – are coloured in red and there are two other countries (Syria and Iraq) rendered in light red. This flyer can be considered as an example of misleading information. The title of the flyer “Countries ‘set to join’ in EU” is not correct, since those countries have only applied to be part of the EU and are not “set to join”. They will considered to be part of the EU only in case they meet the strict criteria required by the EU (so there is no guarantee). During the campaign Michael Gove claimed that Turkey and four other countries could join the EU and claimed it was possible this could happen within four years. So it can be clearly seen how the use of the wording is conveying a deceptive information. The fact that Syria and Iraq are in the flyer implies that these country are not that after the join of the Turkey to the EU. Even though Turkey has applied to the EU since 1999, talks have long stalled and there is no prospect of the country joining the bloc anytime soon due to human rights abuses and European Council has said that it will not open talks in any new areas.

The official Brexit campaign group was accused of deceptive data visualization.

CR3Another example of deceptive information was the widely disputed claim that the EU “costs £350 million a week. Despite warnings from the UK Statistics Authority, who accused the figures to be inaccurate, these figures were continued to be publicized during the campaign continuously.

The deception of information goes further with the Leave campaign with the following flyer.

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Vote Leave graphic

In the above there is clearly no more difference in the colours between the countries that they claim are “set to join” the EU and one that has nothing to do with the EU such as Iraq.

Remain Campaign
The “Remain” campaign was primarily based on the fact that Britain’s economy would suffer if the country voted to Leave.

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Britain out of Europe your family out of pocket – Remain campaign poster

The combination of failure to believe in the economic benefits of EU membership and lack of trust in politicians led to the victory of “Leave”. The Economics of Brexit in Voters’ Eyes (or, Why the Remain campaign Failed) is a paper published as part of the ESRC-funded What UK Thinks: EU project that outlines why the Remain campaign failed to convince the voters to opt for stay in the EU:

  • Past EU performance: people were not convinced that Britain had benefitted economically from the EU in the past or would do so in the future;BSIE_1200x628_SALARIES-1800_v3
  • Voters were disinclined to trust the views of the “experts;
  • Concern about immigration and identity were too important to the public’s views about the EU that they influenced the way people saw the economic case for Brexit too. Voters were not necessarily willing to focus on the economic arguments alone.

Different posters were launched during the campaign that had the aim to show the advantages of staying in the EU such as the below, that has the word “IN” highlighted in yellow in all the slogan words used in the favour of the remain campaign. The IN word leads all the way down to a tick box, inviting to vote for “Remain”.

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There were other posters that had the aim to highlight the dark sides of leaving the EU. The following poster by M&C Saatchi, shows stairs heading up to an open door that leads into darkness with a sentence saying “Leave, and there’s no going back”.

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M&C Saatchi – Britain Stronger in Europe campaign poster

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Another interesting poster that can be found on the StrongerIn website in the following:

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We went to prison for your vote

The image depicts a woman in the center with a poster around her neck that says “We went prison for your vote. Take 2 minutes to #register”. This is being clearly aimed at encouraging the call to the polls for women.

Conclusion

The important role of the propaganda in the Brexit referendum is undeniable. But it is even more undeniable how the propaganda has been used to convey deceptive and misleading information by leveraging on people’s fear during the Brexit campaign.  In particular by leveraging the fear of communities with precarious and hard-won legal and economic statuses, who want to protect those achievements because they felt them vulnerable. Some people voted emotionally; others voted based on that deception.

Reference

BBC

Ipsos MORI

HyperAllergic – The Visual Propaganda of the Brexit Leave Campaign

The Guardian – Fear of immigration drove the leave victory – not immigration itself

Independent – Final Say: The misinformation that was told about Brexit during and after the referendum

BBC – Lead EU referendum campaigns named

What UK Thinks: EU – New research uncovers the reasons why the Remain campaign failed to convince enough voters of economic case to stay in the EU

Unit 2: From Pop Culture to Digital

Pop art is an art movement that emerged in the United Kingdom and the United States during the mid- to late-1950s. The movement presented a challenge to traditions of fine art by including imagery from popular and mass culture, such as advertising, comic books and mundane cultural objects.
The subject matter became far from traditional “high art” themes of morality, mythology, and classic history; rather, Pop artists celebrated commonplace objects and people of everyday life, in this way seeking to elevate popular culture to the level of fine art.

Key Figures

Paolozzi, a Scottish sculptor and artist, was a key member of the British post-war avant-garde. His collage I Was a Rich Man’s Plaything proved an important foundational work for the Pop art movement, combining pop culture documents like a pulp fiction novel cover, a Coca-Cola advertisement, and a military recruitment advertisement.

The origins of pop art in North America and Great Britain developed differently. In the United States, it marked a return to hard-edged composition and representational art as a response by artists using impersonal, mundane reality, irony and parody to defuse the personal symbolism and “painterly looseness” of Abstract expressionism. By contrast, the origin in post-War Britain, while employing irony and parody, was more academic with a focus on the dynamic and paradoxical imagery of American popular culture as powerful, manipulative symbolic devices that were affecting whole patterns of life, while improving prosperity of a society. Early pop art in Britain was a matter of ideas fueled by American popular culture viewed from afar, while the American artists were inspired by the experience of living within that culture.
Similarly, pop art was both an extension and a repudiation of Dadaism. While pop art and Dadaism explored some of the same subjects, pop art replaced the destructive, satirical, and anarchic impulses of the Dada movement with detached affirmation of the artifacts of mass culture. Among those artists seen by some as producing work leading up to Pop art are Pablo Picasso, Marcel Duchamp, Kurt Schwitters, and Man Ray. Some of the work of Alex Katz anticipated Pop art.

Peter Blake
He is a contemporary British artist known for his association with the Pop Art movement. Alongside David Hockney, Patrick Caulfield, and Richard Hamilton, Blake sourced imagery from popular culture to produce colorful and distinctly graphic works.

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Peter Blake – Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band, 2007

He is perhaps best known for creating the album cover for The Beatles’s Sgt Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band in 1967. “I wanted to make an art that was the visual equivalent of pop music,” he reflected. “When I made a portrait of Elvis I was hoping for an audience of 16-year-old girl Elvis fans, although that never really worked.”

Richard Hamilton
Richard Hamilton was an English artist known for producing some of the earliest works of Pop Art. Though he used a wide variety of techniques during his career, his most recognizable works, such as Study for a Fashion Plate (1969). He was a member of ICA in the early 1950s.

Andy Warhol (1928 – 1987)
Andy Warhol was an American artist who was a leading figure in the visual art movement known as pop art. His works explore the relationship between artistic expression, celebrity culture and advertisement that flourished by the 1960s. After a successful career as a commercial illustrator, Warhol became a renowned and sometimes controversial artist.
Warhol’s art used many types of media, including hand drawing, painting, printmaking, photography, silk screening, sculpture, film, and music. He was also a pioneer in computer-generated art using Amiga computers that were introduced in 1984, two years before his death.

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Andy Warhol – Campbell’s Soup

It was during the 1960s that Warhol began to make paintings of iconic American objects such as dollar bills, mushroom clouds, electric chairs, Campbell’s Soup Cans, Coca-Cola bottles, celebrities such as Marilyn Monroe, Elvis Presley, Marlon Brando, Troy Donahue, Muhammad Ali, and Elizabeth Taylor, as well as newspaper headlines or photographs of police dogs attacking civil rights protesters. During these years, he founded his studio, “The Factory” and gathered about him a wide range of artists, writers, musicians, and underground celebrities. His work became popular and controversial.

Roy Lichtenstein (1923 – 1997)
Roy Lichtenstein was an American artist known for his paintings and prints which referenced commercial art and popular culture icons like Mickey Mouse. Composed using Ben-Day dots—the method used by newspapers and comic strips to denote gradients and texture—Lichtenstein’s work mimicked the mechanical technique with his own hand on a much larger scale. He was a leading figure in establishing the Pop Art movement, along with Claes Oldenburg, Andy Warhol, and Jasper Johns.

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Roy Lichtenstein – Whaam! (1963)

His most famous image is Whaam! one of the earliest examples of Pop Art, adapted a comic book panel from 1962.

1960 – 1970s Psychedelic

Psychedelic Art generally refers to art that has been influenced by hallucinogenic drugs. However, it may also refer to the art of the 1960s counter-culture movement. Some people relate art that is a visual depiction of kaleidoscopic-like patterns to the Psychedelic Art movement. The movement was closely linked to the psychedelic music of the 1960s as well and was evident in both concert posters and record album covers.
The discovery of LSD and its subsequent popularity as an agent that produces altered states of consciousness was at the core of the Psychedelic Art movement; however, other drugs were also used as a means of inducing certain types of artistic expressions. Various poster artists of San Francisco were responsible for launching the Psychedelic Art movement during the 1960s.
Many works, especially evident in concert and event posters, depicted a strong color palette—usually of contrasting colors—along with ornate lettering, and kaleidoscopic swirls. The art of this period also reflected Art Nouveau and Victorian influences.

1970 – 1980s Punk & New Wave

During the 1980s some young Swiss designers felt the need to move on from the Internation Style. Wolfgang Weingart experimented with looser organization, violating the strict grid with more intuitive placement of objects and painterly treatment of surfaces. He overlapped images, used enlarged half-tone patterns and graphic visual elements. Rather than rejection of the Swiss Style, Weingart saw his work as a next logical progression.

Peter Saville
Probably most noted for his record and album cover designs for Factory Records, Peter Saville was a designer whose career spanned several decades. His early work, in the late 1970s and early 80s, included album covers for several bands on the Factory Records label, but the ones that achieved the highest level of fame were for New Order and Joy Division.

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Peter Saville – Album covers

He was particularly influenced by the work of Jan Tschichold and his disciplined, yet subtle approach to typography.

Jamie Reid (b. 1947)
Jamie Reid is a British artist best known for his décollage covers of the Sex Pistols’ albums Never Mind the Bollocks and Here’s the Sex Pistols, as well as their singles “Anarchy in the U.K.” and “God Save the Queen.” A self-described anarchist, Reid’s cover art helped define the aesthetic of the British punk movement with its faux-ransom-note letters and iconoclastic defacements of pop culture and nationalistic images.

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Jamie Reid – Sex Pistols Poster

Paula Scher (b. 1948)
Scher began her career creating album covers for both Atlantic and CBS records. However, it was not long before she formed her own design company, and after only a few years there she joined Pentagram. During her career she has created memorable identities and other work for clients such as Citi Bank, Coca-Cola, the Metropolitan Opera, the Museum of Modern Art and the New York Philharmonic, among others.

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Paula Scher – Sydney Shaffer

Digital Design

The invention of the personal computer shook the entire world, forcing people to evaluate the way that they communicated with others and providing a new platform for design and advertising to distribute its messages. Flipping the design community on its had both as a tool of production and personal expression the computer has been both an asset and hindrance to the world of graphic design ever since.

Susan Kare
She was one of the first graphic designer hired by Apple Macintosh in the early 80s to create fonts, interfaces icons for Macintosh.

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Susan Kare – Digital Icons

April Greiman (b. 1948)
In the 1980s the computer hit the consumer market on a variety of different fronts. At the time the computer was seen as a tool for technology based industries, but April Greiman took advantage of its potential as a new visual medium and helped usher in the digital era of design as she pushed the boundaries of design.

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April Greiman – Wet Magazine

She finds the title graphic designer too limiting and prefers to call herself a trans-media artist. Her work has inspired designers to develop the computer as a tool of design and to be curious and searching in their design approach.
She received the Grand prize in Mac World’s first Macintosh Masters in Art Competition.

Neville Brody (b. 1948)
He is a London graphic designer, typographer and art director. He was one of another early adaptor to computer based design.

David Carson (b. 1955)
Carson was born in Corpus Christi, Texas and spent much of his early life in southern California where he was a high school teacher before becoming a designer. Ingrained within the surfing sub-culture of southern California, Carson started experimenting with graphic design during the mid 1980s. Not only a designer, in 1989 he has qualified as the 9th best surfer in the world.

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David Carson – Ray Gun Magazine

His interest in the world of surfing gave him the opportunities to experiment with design, working on several different publications related to the profession. He his well known for his experimental typography. He was founding art director of alternative rock magazine Ray Gun where his experimentation with layout and expressive type gained attention. He created a personal grunge style that inspired many graphic designer.

Louise Fili
A designer who is absolutely enthralled with Italian culture, Louise Fili worked in the book publishing business for 11 years and now runs her own design studio where she specializes in restaurant identity, food packaging and book jacket design. Her interest in food and the Italian culture started when she was very young. The daughter of Italian immigrants, she first visited Italy when she was 16 years old.

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Louise Fili – Design and Typography

Her affection for typography also started when she was very young and she would often spend the night-time hours hiding in the dark so she could carve lettering into the wall over her bed.

Michael Beirut
He is a graphic designer, design critic and educator who designed the logo for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign. He is currently a partner at Pentagram NY but previously was a Vice president at Vignelli Associates.

Stefan Sagmeister
Austrian born but New York based Sagmeister is Design Principal of Sagmeister & Walsh Inc (with partner Jessica Walsh). He is known for his highly provocative designer who takes creative risks in his approach to projects. His clients include, Adobe, Red Bull, MoMa, AIGA, NYTimes Magazine and many more.

Jonathon Barnbrook
He is a British graphic designer, film maker and typographer. Barnbrook designed the cover artwork of David Bowie’s 2002 album Heathen, where he used his ‘Priori’ typeface for the first type.
Barnbook has produced many font, but Mason and Exocet are among his most popular released Emigré.

Ireland

The Project Twins
The founder of the the Project Twins are Michael & James Fitzgerald. Their work takes inspiration from mid-century American designers such as Bass, Chwast and Glaser.

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The Project Twins – Halliday Magazine Cover

Steve Simpson
Originally from England, he moved to Dublin to set up his studio in Dun Laoghaire. He is in a Illustrator, animator, toy creator, designer art director and artist. His client list includes Jameson, Universal Studio, Inferno Sauce, Magners, Harrods, Adobe 7up, Dunne Stores and more.

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Steve Simpson

His work is influenced by South American folk art, with limited colour palette.

Paula McGloin
She is an illustator and surface designer, with studio in Dublin. Member of the Illustrators Guild of Ireland.

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Paula McGloin – Cup Pattern

Her work is characterized by an international appeal and appears worldwide in books, editorial, retail design, fashion, fabrics and ceramics.

Reference

ArtNet

ArtHisotory – Psychedlic Art

The Art Story

History of Graphic Design – Pop art

Unit 2: The Swiss Style

The International Typographic Style, which is also called the Swiss Style, was built up by designers from Switzerland in the middle of the 20th century.  Due to its neutrality during the second world war, the country became the meeting point for intellectuals and ideas for many different places such as Holland, Russia, Germany and England.

The movement of Swiss style began at Swiss schools. The first being Kunstgewerbeschule in Zurich. This art and design institute was led by the influential Josef Müller-Brockmann. The second school involved in the development of Swiss style graphic design was Allgemeine Gewerbeschule in Basel, which was led by Armin Hofmann.

Students at these schools were never forced to adopt a certain style but instead a respect for content through simplicity was encouraged. This became the birth of Swiss style graphic design – inspired by the modernist ideal of form following function.

The Swiss style included works of book, poster, trademarks and advertising. Designers consciously moved away from illustration by using more photography. Swiss style emphasized on neatness, eye-friendliness, readability and objectivity. It was a shared interest among designers to communicate ideas universally and effectively. This basic knowledge of universal understanding made Swiss style earn its moniker dubbing it as the ‘International Typographic Style’.

Swiss Style
The Swiss Style – https://gt3themes.com

The Swiss styles is characterized by applying the norms on simple yet artistically and clearly deliver messages by:

  • Preserving uniformity and geometry
  • Allowing wider spacing
  • Using of grid systems
  • Structuring information
  • Keeping minimalism
  • Using sans serif fonts
  • Using different fonts sizes
  • Using of effective photography

Key figures of the movement

Max Bill (1908 – 1994)
He was a Swiss architect, artist, painter, typeface designer, industrial designer and graphic designer. He was student at Bauhaus school in Dessau. He became and important for his contribution to graphic design when Switzerland became the centre of the continuation of avant-garde ideas. He had admiration for Le Corbusier and shared the idea that designer should be prepared as architects. He became professor at the school of arts in Zurich in 1944.

Emil Ruder (1914 – 1970)
He was one of the major contributors to Swiss Style design. He taught that typography’s purpose was to communicate ideas through writing, as well as placing a heavy importance on Sans-serif typefaces. Ruder began his education in design at the age of fifteen when he took a compositor’s apprenticeship. By his late twenty’s, he began attending the Zurich School of Arts and Crafts when the principles of Bauhaus and Tschichold’s new typography were taught. He is distinguishable in the field of typography for developing a holistic approach to designing and teaching that comprised philosophy, theory and a systematic practical methodology.

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Emil Ruder – History of Graphic Design

Armin Hofman (b. 1920)
He taught for several years at the Basel School of Design and he was not there long before he replaced Emil Ruder as the head of the school. The Swiss International Style, and Hofmann, thought that one of the most efficient forms of communications was the poster and Hofmann spent much of his career designing posters, in particularly for the Basel Stadt Theater. His Graphic Design Manual was, and still is, a reference book for all graphic designers.

Josef Muller-Brockmann (1914 – 1996)
Joseph Müller-Brockmann was influenced by the ideas of several different design and art movements including Constructivism, De Stijl, Suprematism and the Bauhaus. Perhaps his most decisive work was done for the Zurich Town Hall as poster advertisements for its theater productions. He published several books, including The Graphic Artist and His Problems and Grid Systems in Graphic Design.

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Josef Muller-Brockmann – Design is History

Herbert Matter
Matter was a Swiss born American graphic designer and photographer. He was also a master of using photomontage, color and typography in an expressive manner, transcending the boundaries between art and design. His design work often favored a heavy use of photography. His most recognizable works are the posters he created for the Swiss Tourist Office.

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Herbert Matter – Design is History

Max Huber (1919 – 1992)
He was a swiss graphic designer, artist and educator well known for his innovative and edgy approach to design. His career begins in 1935 in Zurich where he works for an advertising agency. With the beginning of the World War II – in order to avoid being drafted in the Swiss army – he moves to Milan to join the Studio Boggeri. But Italy enters the war in 1941 and Huber is forced back to Switzerland where he begins a collaboration with Werner Bischof and Emil Schultness for the influential art magazine Du.

Wolfgard Weingart (b. 1941)
He was tyesetter but became a graphic designer and typographer. He was teacher a the Basel School of Design in 1963. Even though his work come from the Swiss typographic traditional he launched a new style known as “new wave” or punk. This consisted in deconstruction of type and the rearrangement of elements in new compositions.

Swiss Typography

Akzidenz-Grotesk
Is a grotesque typeface originally released by the Berthold Type Foundry in 1896 under the name Accidenz-Grotesk. It was the first sans serif typeface to be widely usedand influenced many later neo-grotesque typefaces after 1950.

Futura
Paul Renner was a typeface designer. In 1927, he designed the Futura typeface, which became one of the most successful and most-used types of the 20th century.

Helvetica
Helvetica was developed in 1957 by Max Miedinger with Eduard Hoffmann at the Haas’sche Schriftgiesserei (Haas Type Foundry) of Münchenstein, Switzerland. Haas set out to design a new sans-serif typeface that could compete with the successful Akzidenz Grotesk in the Swiss market. Originally called Neue Haas Grotesk, its design was based on Schelter-Grotesk and Haas’ Normal Grotesk. The aim of the new design was to create a neutral typeface that had great clarity, no intrinsic meaning in its form, and could be used on a wide variety of signage.

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Helvetica

In 1960, the typeface’s name was changed by Haas’ German parent company Stempel to Helvetica (meaning Swiss in Latin) in order to make it more marketable internationally.

Univers Type Family
In 1954, Adrian Frutiger, Deberny & Peignot foundry’s art director, suggested to create a new font that would be suitable for the typesetting of longer texts. Univers type family was born 1957. It is considered to be unique because it became one of the first typefaces produced for use with phototypesetting systems.

International Typography Style
Swiss style began to internationalize thanks to official graduate programs promoted between the Design School at Yale and that of the school of Applied Arts in Basel. Student took part in exchange programmes and the American students carried their knowledge back to the States. In addition to this, another important element that spread the style was the distribution of publication like “Neue Grafik“.
European graphic designers worked in American companies and vice-versa. All these elements contribute to increase the interest in the Swiss style internationally.

International Style and Corporate Identity

In the 1950s the was over. This was the era of a huge corporate growth. At the end of the was the troops were back home, and everyone wanted a family, a house and a car. Corporate in the US were doing there best to meet these needs.

Paul Rand (1914 – 1996)
He was an American Graphic designer, lecturer and art director. He was one of the first American designers to take inspiration from Swiss Style design. He was also influenced by the avant-garde movements such as Constuctivism, De Stijl and Bauhaus.

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Paul Rand – Corporate Logs (Next – IBM)

He is very well known for his contribution to graphic design thanks to the corporate identities such as IBM, ABC, Cummins Engine, Westinghous, UPS. Rand’s defining corporate identity was his IBM logo in 1956.

Saul Bass
He was a graphic designer, film maker and illustrator, very well known for his companies logo but in particular for his creative collaboration with Alfred Hitchock and other Hollywood directors that made him a household name.

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Saul Bass – Movie Posters

He revolutionized the way that people viewed movie titles by using the time to not just display the information but give a short visual metaphor or story that intrigued the viewer. Often times it was a synopsis or reference to the movie itself. His list of title credits include famous films such as West Side Story, Psycho, Goodfellas, Big, North by Northwest and Spartacus. He created four titles for Martin Scorsese, the last of which was for Casino.

Push Pin Studios

Push Pin Studios is a graphic design and illustration studio formed in New York City in 1954. Cooper Union graduates Milton Glaser, Seymour Chwast, Reynold Ruffins, and Edward Sorel founded the studio.
Push Pin look has nothing in common with the Swiss Style, it was often remixed with historical styles, in particular Art Nouveau, Victorian Typography and wood type. Push Pin work was characterized by very strong political statements against racial issue as well as humour.

Key figures

Milton Glaser
He is an American graphic designer and founding member of the Push Pin Studio in 1953. He is very well known for his pro bono work the “I Love New York” logo and Bob Dylan poster.

Seymour Chwast
He was a graphic designer and a founding member of Push Pin studios with Miton Glaser and Ed Sorel. He has a very wide range of styles and diverse of work.

Jacqueline Casey
She was an American graphic designer mostly known for her International style work for MIT.

Alvin Lustig
He had a varied design background, known for his contribution to book cover design and also as an interior and architectural designer. He is known for his geometric shapes, flat colours and patterns.

Elaine Lustig Cohen
Alvin Lustig’s wife, she is a graphic designer, fine art painter his style was influenced by European Avant garde. Her work is characterized by abstract elements incorporated with typographic elements.

Massimo Vignelli
He studied Architecture in Italy and moved to New York. His first major foray into the field of identity and branding was through Unimark International, which quickly became one of the largest design studios in the world.

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Massimo Vignelli – New York City Subway map

He has designed identities for international corporations including American Airlines (which is the only airline to have not changed their identity in the past 50 years), Bloomingdales and Knoll. He favors a clarity in design and is a huge fan of using Helvetica, which can be seen in much of his work.

Reference

Design is History

History of Graphic Design

Swiss Style in motion animation

Visual Hierarchy

What is Swiss Style Typography?

Unit 2: Bauhaus Movement

The Bauhaus movement takes its name from a German institution, named the Bauhaus, founded in Weimar (Germany) by Walter Gropius in 1919. The idea behind this school was to create a “total art work” where all the arts could be unified together. The Bauhaus style later became one of the most influential currents in modern design, Modernist architecture and art, design, and architectural education.
The school existed in three German cities—Weimar, from 1919 to 1925; Dessau, from 1925 to 1932; and Berlin, from 1932 to 1933—under three different architect-directors: Walter Gropius from 1919 to 1928; Hannes Meyer from 1928 to 1930; and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe from 1930 until 1933, when the school was closed by its own leadership under pressure from the Nazi regime, having been painted as a centre of communist intellectualism. Although the school was closed, the staff continued to spread its idealistic precepts as they left Germany and emigrated all over the world.

The Bauhaus Style
The movement was influenced by the modernism. Modernist artists sought to strip their arts of all ornamentation and reduce them to the simplest.In essence, they sought to restore the purity of art by removing everything unnecessary and leaving only the line, shape and colour. The Bauhaus movement came to define a type of Modernism known as the International Style. Simplistic in design, International art and architecture stressed functionality over everything else, and sought to challenge the way buildings, art, and even decorative objects like chairs could be used. They tended to be geometric, plainly colored or white, and useful/functional. The basic idea of this movement was the fact that they believed that art could be beautiful without ceasing to be useful. Decorative crafts, utilized as furniture or textiles in a home, were a big part of this.

Main exponents of the Bauhaus

Johannes Itten he used to teach the “preliminary course” of basics of material characteristics, composition and colour. He is known for his contribution in furthering the studies of the colour wheel that we know today. He was a follower of a fire cult originating in the US derived from the Zoroastrianism. He was very spiritual person, meditation was his main source of inspiration and practice. He used to associate colours with emotions on the basis of the temperature.

Paul Klee was a Swiss German musician and artist. He was a memeber of the “Blue Rider” that was group of artists working in abstract expressionism. He used mystical hieroglyphs forms and unconventional looking creature in his work. He was master at Bauhaus and taught bookbinding, painting and stained glass production.

Wassily Kandinsky was born in Moscow, Russia. He studied economics and law at the University of Moscow. Kandinsky always enjoyed music and painting since his childhood. A turning point in his life towards art is due to a performance of Richard Wagner’s opera, Lohengrin, where he experienced synesthesia. After leaving law he moved to Germany and attended art school at Munich. For Kandinsky, art was a spiritual and emotional experience. He wanted his painting to transcend recognized forms and express feelings through colours and shapes. He also argued that artistic experiences were all about feeling, and colours affected mood. One of his work was included in the famous 1913 New York Armory Show that introduced Americans to the European modern art movement.

Lyonel Feininger was a German American painter, caricaturist and comic strip artist. He was the first person to get the job at the Bauhaus school and he designed Bauhaus Manifesto “Cathedral” in 1919.

Laszlo Moholy-Nagy was a Hungarian painter, photographer and professor in the Bauhaus school. He experimented with photomontage and typography, he stated that the ladder is a “tool of communication” and emphasized that the type must be clear, legible and communicate the message. He succeeded in creating an asymmetrical typography. His passion for typography and photomontage inspired a Bauhaus interest in visual communication.

Hannes Meyer was director of Bauhaus after Gropius was forced to resigned from the School. He was hired to set up the architectural program in the school. Meyer had communist ideal and growth of communist student organization in the Bauhaus became a threat to the existence of the period in that period.

Joseph Albers was a German born American artist and educator who worked in Europe and United States. He was enrolled as a student at Bauhaus 1923, Gropius asked him to teach preliminary course on handcrafting due to his experience in the field. Very well known for creating furniture, such as chairs. At the Bauhaus he created a new typeface called “Kombinationshrift”, that used 10 basic geometrical shapes to create letters and numbers.

Anni Albers she is known for her integration of abstract modernism into textile weavings. She was married to Joseph Albers and together they moved to the United States when Nazi party threatened the Bauhaus.

Marianne Brandt known for her metal work, but she worked privately on photomontage and avant garde collage composition at the Bauhaus, these were kept hidden until 1970s.

Herbert Bayer, was a student at Bauhaus and after passing his final examination he was appointed by Gropius direct the printing & advertising workshop to open the Dessau location. In 1925 he was asked by Gropius to design a typeface for all Bauhaus communication. During this occasion he created the “universal” typeface a simple geometric sans serif font. He believed that a typeface needed to be functional, able to communicate so there was no need to add serif and upper case letters.

Jan Tschichold was greatly influenced by the Bauhaus approach to typography. He is most noted for his manifesto “The New Typography” in which he condemned all the typefaces except sans-serif. He rejected decoration in favour of a more rational design planned for communicative function. His design were stripped of unnecessary elements and typeface was reduced to its basic elementary shapes. In 1933 Tschichold and her wife were arrested by the Nazis, since he was accused for creating an “un-German” typography. After this event his family and him fled to Basel where he worked as a Book designer. He began to turn his back on the “New Typography” and started using roman, Egyptian and script styles in his design. Since he felt the “New Typography” was the reaction to the chaos and anarchy in Germany and that it couldn’t develop any further.

Women at Bauhaus
While women were allowed into the German school—and its manifesto stated that it welcomed “any person of good repute, without regard to age or sex”—a strong gender bias still informed its structure. Female students, for instance, were encouraged to pursue weaving rather than male-dominated mediums like painting, carving, and architecture. Bauhaus founder Walter Gropius encouraged this distinction through his vocal belief that men thought in three dimensions, while women could only handle two.

Arndt’s ambition was to become an architect, but it was only after she landed at the Bauhaus in 1923 that she realized architecture classes were not yet available at the school. She ended up crafting geometrically patterned rugs in the weaving workshop. As a self-taught photographer, Arndt began by shooting the buildings and urban landscapes around her. She also assisted her husband’s architecture firm by photographing their construction sites and buildings.

Stölzl was one of the earliest Bauhaus members, arriving at the school in 1919 at the age of 22. The same year, she penned confident diary entries that would foreshadow her success as a leading designer of the era. “Nothing hinders me in my outward life, I can shape it as I will,” one reads. “A new beginning. A new life begins,” goes another. While she experimented with a diverse range of disciplines at the Bauhaus, Stölzl focused on weaving, a department that she helmed from 1926 to 1931. There, she was known for complex patchworks of patterns, composed of undulating lines that melt into kaleidoscopic mosaics of colored squares. They took the form of rugs, wall tapestries, and coverings for Marcel Breuer’s chairs.

BAUHAUS IMPACT TODAY

Bauhaus has celebrated 100 years this year and its style principles are still applied in many works today as well. If we think of IKEA, that is one of the perfect example of the Bauhaus principle application: mass production and functional furniture. It was part of the Bauhaus philosophy that modern design should harness industrial techniques to make products accessible to everyone.

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Ikea Gunde folding chair

Bauhaus has revolutionized the way many architects conceptualize their work, using function as a main factor that drives the designing of their buildings.

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Alzheimer’s Respite Centre, Dublin

An example of Bauhaus architect can be found in Dublin: “Alzheimer’s Respite Centre” built with shorter corridors and large windows for easier way-finding.

References

Alzheimer’s Respite Centre, Dublin, by Niall McLaughlin Architects

Design is History

History of Graphic Design

The Local – How Bauhaus designed the world as we know it

The Guardian – Bauhaus at 100: its legacy in five key designs

Artsy – The Woman of the Bauhaus School

Unit 2: Russian Constructivism – De Stijl

The 20th century is characterized by the birth of multiple modern art movements such as: Avant Garde, De Stijl, DaDa in Europe and Constructivism in Russia.

Most or the artists and designers of this period start taking their distance from the traditional forms of art and embrace new modes of thinking, creating and living. They share this common rejection for war and European and american capitalism. They reject the representational art, the art that is purely for aesthetic pleasure. They believe in the creation of a new original visual language.

Avant Garde
The most influential artists of the this movement are Pablo Picasso and Gerog Braque. Pablo Picasso’s painting Les Madmoiselle D’Avignon represents a turning point from traditional composition and perspective of painting. Figurative painting composed of flat, fractured planes and faces inspired by the african masks.

De Stijl
The Stijl, known also as neoplasticism, is a dutch movement founded by Piet Mondrian and Theo Van Deosbourg in 1917 in the Netherlands. The aim of the movement was to create a universal style in architecture, paintings and design. Functionalism and simplicity are the main elements of this movement, characterized by the use geometric shapes, straight lines, primary colours with use of black, white and grey only, use of positive and negative spaces.

DaDa
Dada or Dadaism it is european avant-garde movement that started in the 20th century. Developed in reaction to World War I, the Dada movement consisted of artists who rejected the logic, reason, and aestheticism of modern capitalist society, instead expressing nonsense, irrationality, and anti-bourgeois protest in their works. (wikipedia) The explosion of photographic images in the mass media in the year of the wars, stimulated artist’s experimentation with montage and collage.
The main exponents of the this movement are Kurt Schwitters famous for is collages and known also as the father of collage.
Raoul Hausmann was the founding member of the Dada movement in Berlin. He was one of the pioneers of photomontage and use this as tool for political protest.
Hanna Hoch was a German Dada artist, famous for her photomontage and through her work she touched issues related to gender, politics and androgyny.
John Heartfield famous for his photomontage, he cut and pasted together parts of different photographs to recreate new compositions, often satirizing Hitler and Nazy party.

Constructivism
Constructivism starts in Russia around 1913, by a group of artists and architects influenced by cubism. It conjoins together different fields of painting, sculpture and kinetics with machine production, architecture and applied arts. It is movement that put the art to work in the service of the nation. In 1920, the movement writes its first “Realist Manifesto” in which outlines the goals of the movement (one of which was “construct art”) they show their enthusiasm for machines, technology, industrialism and modern industrial material. They do not believe the abstract ideas, they try to link art with concrete and tangible ideas. Stylistically speaking the movement is characterized by use of:

  • geometrical elements;
  • typography, they use san serif typefaces in their work;
  • flat, symbolic colours (red, black etc..)
  • white spaces;
  • Photography and photomontage.

The most influential artists of this movement were:

El Lissitizky, Alexander Rodchenko, Varvara Stepanova, Gustav Kutisis,Valentina Kulagina and Stenberg Brothers.

El Lissitzkey most of the innovative artists among the constructivists. He worked using different media painting, graphic design, photography and architecture.
Alexander Rodchenko believed in the introduction of art in everyday life. As Lissitzky he worked in different media such as painting, sculpture, graphic design, photography and montage.
Varvara Stepanova she was a Russian avant-garde artist, painter, photographer and designer, dedicating large part of her life to affecting social change (she created posters, set design, costume and books). She uses her art with the purpose of making the change in the society.
Gustav Klutsis, was an art teacher, photographer and graphic artist. He is considered to be one of the pioneers of the photomontage. He worked for Stalin with her wife Valentina Kulagina whose work is characterized by a mixture of techniques that goes from lytography, photomontage, typography and painting.
Stenberg Brothers are famous for their movie posters for the Russian cinema, they developed a special hand technique to increase the image poster size since the mechanical engagement was not available in that period. They used contrasting colours and unusual colours to create a dramatic impact.

Contemporary
Jim Fitzpatrick, is an Irish artist that is mostly known for his Celtic illustrations and Thin Lizzy work.
Shepard Fairey, is a graphic designer, illustrator, street artist and activist.

CONSTRUCTIVISM TODAY

One legacy is the popularity of the Constructivist style, which was reinvented by Saul Bass’s in 1950s titles for “Vertigo,” “Psycho” and other Alfred Hitchcock movies to Barney Bubbles’s 1970s artwork for Stiff Records and the current Saks campaign.

Russian constructivism propaganda posters have influenced and inspired the work of many of today’s Graphic designers. I found some examples of poster where the influence of the style can clearly be seen. The poster for CBS Recordas by Paula Scher (1938).

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CBS Records (1979) – Paula Scher

Say Yes!(2008) Shepard Fairey – inspired by a song of the same name by a band called the Afternoons. This poster was seen on the streets of LA shortly after the Obama posters.

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Say Yes! (2008) – Shepard Fairey

References

The Art Story – Constructivism

The Design History – Constructivism

NY Times – The enduring legacy of Soviet Constructionism

CSUN – Russia Constructivism

Unit 2: Contextual Studies

Industrial revolution (1760s – 1840s)
This period is characterized with a huge innovation in Europe and U.S. in multiple sectors. The invention of the steam engine brought huge innovation in transportation and factories (since there was no more need for these to be built on rivers). In addition to the this the invention of steel brought change in the urban architecture as well since buildings could be made much more taller. The boom in the steel industry led to the invention of the car.
The industrial revolution brought innovation in textiles and glass sector. Especially the invention in the sheet glass led to architecture creation such as the Crystal palace designed by Joseph Paxton to house the Great exhibition of 1851.
Together with innovation industrialization brought downsides effects as well such as pollution, that led to disease such as lung cancer, child labour and a huge social economical difference between the owners of the factories and worker.

During this period of change graphic communication became more and more important, such as:

  • colour lytography
  • typography

One of the major exponents in typographic innovation is William Caslon with the “W Caslon Jun Letter Founder” a sans serif typeface inspired by egyptian style. Wood type and pantograph took place as well, this last combined with the router led to the invention of the new wood type font.
There was more and more spreading of poster that were used to sponsor different clients such as travelling circus and theatrical groups, clothing stores. In order to make hand press stronger and efficient several improvements were thought such as the steam-powered printing press. This was invented by a German printer, Friedrich Koenig.
In 1815 William Cowper obtained the patent for a printing press using curved stereotyped plates wrapped a cylinder that could produce 2400 impressions per hour.
Linotype took leap around 1886 that was created to reduce compositer’s work time. The rapid development of lynotype caused unemployment for thousands of highly skilled hand-typesetters. However the new technology brought an explosion in the graphic design sector that came along with a high number of jobs as well. With the invention of lynotype book publishing expanded rapidly.
Photography took the leap as well during this period, photos used for different purposes such as photojournalism. The development of motion-picture photography became important as well.

The Victorian Era (1837 – 1901)
This refers to the period of the reign of Queen Victoria. Innovation of industrial revolution brought innovation in arts and industry.
Art of this period is characterized by an aesthetic confusion, gothic influence and eclectic mix.Artists conveyed the values of the era such as nostalgia, romanticism, and principle of an idealized beauty expressed through printed images of children, puppies, maiden and flowers, objects that are ornamented heavily.

The main exponents of the Victorian were:
Walter Crane, famous for his didactic and moral purpose images.
Randolph Caldecott, in his work he tend to personified dishes and plates.
Kate Greenaway she was a book designer and cloth designer.

There is born of Editorial and advertising as well, Harper and Brothers had become the largest printing and publishing firm in the world. They opened the era of pictorial magazine in 1850.
Victorian typography presented the following characteristics:

  • Ornate in letterforms;
  • Gothic influence, calligraphic approach;
  • Extreme variations of tpe size and weight;
  • design and content fill the whole page.

Arts & Crafts Movement
This movement began in England in 1860 and characterized with the focus on the quality of the materials; appreciation for old methods of production; natural materials. The style of this movement is often described as “honest” in terms of expression of function, materials and techniques of production.

The main exponents of Arts & Crafts Movement
John Ruskin (1819-1900) was an English critic of art, architecture.
William Morris (1834 – 1896) designer that focused on the design for textiles, wallpapers, book and typography. He took his inspiration from the nature. His designs were charaterized by simplicity, refreshing and decorative. He felt that the study of the nature was important to produce good design.
Kelmscott Press famous for his stylish bookworks.
Philip Webb (1831 – 1915) interested in architecture and interiors.
Charles Rennie Mackintosh (1868-1928) his art designs incorporated elements both from Art & Crafts movement as well as Art Nouveau. He is widely known for furniture designs. He is also very well known for his distinct lettering.
Eric Gill (1882 – 1940) he is very well known for his typeface Gill Sans and Perpetua.

Art Nouveau
The period of innovation and prosperity in the 19th century brought the upper middle class to support new and experimental direction in designs. France and Belgium became the leading region in the development of art Nouveau (1890 – 1910). Art Nouveau is based on:

  • rejection of Victorian styles;
  • rejection of historical imitations;
  • fine art;
  • Nature as main inspiration;
  • curvilinear forms

The Art Nouveau spread in different fields – architecture, furniture and product design, fashion and graphics. Art Nouveau graphic designers try to attempt to make art a part of everyday life.

The main exponents of this period are:
Eugene Grasset (1845 – 1917) swiss artist and designer considered to be one of the pioneers of the Art Nouveau. He is famous for is posters, postcards and logos and worked in different fields such as jewellery, sculpture, painting and furniture designing. He was influenced by Japanese art as well.
Aubrey Beardsley (1872 – 1898) was a controversial and prolific illustrator, with sexual concepts described as grotesque, elegant and decadent.
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, inspired by Japanese art and impressionism, he has a journalistic illustrative style that captured the night life of belle epoque.
Alphonse Mucha (1860 – 1939) Czech artist and designer.
Will Bradley (1868 – 1962) famous for his poster style in the U.S.

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