Monthly Archive for October, 2011

The Occupied Times of London

Creative Review surveys The Occupied Times of London. Obviously, whether the protest and occupation are ‘nicely designed’ is missing the point, but nevertheless, its interesting to see something that is in someways more imaginative than the standard fare of left-of-centre graphic clichés, I think. And also good, regardless of what you think of the aesthetic/ethics, to see people deploying their design skills in a hands-on way, rather than the obscure and meaningless distant quest for a logo of this approach.

For more information on Occupy Glasgow, click this.

Identity

The danger is that it’s just talk. Then again, the danger is that it’s not. I believe you can speak things into existence. - Jay-Z, Decoded, 2010

via Artists Space | “Identity”.

Talkers Talking

A quick note about the talks happening this week at 4pm in the 2nd year studio on Friday (28th Oct), with James Houston and Chris Leslie, all vis-com-des students welcome. On Friday, post-talk drinks (again, open to everyone) will be in a local bar/bistro/diner/patisserie, any suggestions of a preferred nearby place very welcome.

And a quick reminder about the Dixon Baxi talk on 3rd Nov, 7pm, Mac Lecture Theatre. We have 20 complimentary tickets courtesy of LongLunch – some of them have been snapped up already by eagle-eyed viewers of the blog, but some are still left. They’re available by responding here, (click link), on a first come first served basis.

Glasgow 1980

Glasgow 1980, as viewed by Oscar Marzaroli, from 1971. In reference to Nostalgia Now brief.

Collage Culture

As a provocation, Collage Culture raises some interesting questions.

GSA Pecha Kucha VI

Like another Phoenix from the flames, GSA Pecha Kucha returns. Please do come along. And spread the word.

Points of Reference

Just did a shit tweet on Twitter about how I’d just put a ‘shit-load’ of links on recommends.tumblr.com/ for current 3/4 graphics projects, based on our discussions of past days/weeks.

Recommends is a work in progress, currently in beta, soon to progress to ceta. It’s a kind of digital ‘dump’ for references (links, pictures, quotes, books etc etc) pertaining to projects. You too can add to the dump by using the ‘submit‘ button on the site, or mailing stuff to 905smaprok[at]tumblr.com, where it will magically appear on the site (about 2 hours later).

On Isms

The well documented crusade against binary or polarised (or ternary) thinking took a bit of a setback with this seemingly well rehearsed (oft repeated?) discussion on Mike Dempsey’s Graphic Journey Blog.

Asking the question; “Do graphic designers read or just look?” it takes in a selective history of graphic design, and illicits a chorus of ‘yesses’ from (some of) the design establishment, though I’m still a bit unclear of what it’s yes for.

I’ll post below an email exchange between me and friend on the topic, in lieu of a more reasoned write-up:

ME: There’s a comment at the foot of the comments section, that I think is alluding to this idea that each of these ‘isms’ is summarised (in the context of this discussion) by a ‘look’, (rather than the motivation or politics of the piece) and that it has to be an either/or situation, you’re either for us or against us… I think this is the most accurate analysis of the problem.

Surely, as a designer, some work you/I do will have to connect with a wide popular audience, whatever that might be, and some of it will be aimed at more niche audiences, so we’ll permanently be treading this grey area, doing a range of things across a range of areas. Factor in to that the self-initiated projects that all (?) designers do to develop their own practise and you have potentially a very rich, and hard-to-categorise landscape. I think the design/art discussion is defunct (well, maybe not defunct as a discussion, but of no use in this context).

HIM: Design’s essentially pluralist, and any attempt to reduce to a binary argument – ideas/style, tradition/modernism, Fletcher/Crouwel, my dad/your dad – is patently a load of rubbish. I stuck a quick post up on my blog that tries to make the point about how similar even Crouwel and Fletcher’s work can be when you view it outside their own private mythology.

I think my parents would have probably appreciated the Fletcher exhibition more than Crouwel as well, but I think that’s as much down to the staging of the exhibition as the work. The Fletcher exhibition was brilliantly staged by GTF on a loosely chronological basis (or so I remember), with the space subdivided into different rooms. You see a logo, then a poster, then an advert, then a book, then another poster – making the whole thing feel a bit more lively. Spin’s design for the Crouwel show on the other hand, all the posters on one wall, all the logos on another, staged in a massive white room, was almost guaranteed to homogenise everything into a fairly daunting whole. Having seen it though, I think more of the austerity came from the show design than Crouwel’s work. These sort of distinctions are never useful.

Paul Rand was obsessed with Swiss design, and wrote the intro to Wolfgang Weingart’s ‘My Way’ (I prefer that title, personally). Bob Gill’s written appreciatively of Karel Martens. Spiekermann calls Alan Fletcher his hero. And Fletcher and Crouwel were friends. There is no dividing line, just people doing things that interest them.

Actually, maybe the biggest irony of all of this is Mike Dempsey invoking Tschichold to provide back up from his argument, when Tschichold’s own conversion to classical style was in part motivated by feeling uncomfortable with his former didacticism.

ME: I agree. I don’t know if its something to do with the blog format, but its all too easy to fall into generalisations and a ‘this happened, then this happened then this’ type approach, as used here. It seems to be a bit myopic as regards the history of graphic design.

I was intrigued by Sara de Bondt’s ‘treating of matters‘ project with the RCA. I thought this was a great effort towards a more nuanced understanding of graphic design history, and the kind of sensitive enquiry we could do with more of.

Image: Paul Elliman and Peter Miles

Good F***ing Design Advice

www.goodfuckingdesignadvice.com

Time Change

chris kohler

New time for Chris Kohler talk: 21st Oct, 10.30am, Illust. Studio.

Typeface As Programme

machine

Designer and programmer Jürg Lehni analyses the evolution of typographic technology and the nature of digital fonts, and introduces Donald E. Knuth’s groundbreaking TeX and Metafont systems.

The book is now out of print, and massively expensive, but some of the essays and interviews can be accessed, via Typotheque: Typeface As Programme by Jürg Lehni. Thanks to Duncan for the tip-off.

Every Movement Needs a Logo?

Comment on the design politics of Occupy Wall Street. (Originally) from the NY times.

Radical Media Forum

Radical Media Forum – Glasgow

1pm – 5pm, Saturday 29th October 2011

Kinning Park Complex
43 Cornwall Street
Glasgow
G41 1BA

The meeting is free, but donations to Kinning Park Complex welcomed.

An open meeting for practitioners, groups and individuals involved in
independent/radical/critical/activist/rebellious/oppositional media, to discuss the development of a broader support network, archiving, collaborations, future events, and encourage debate on current directions of ‘media from below’ in the UK.

Directions and map to Kinning Park Complex:
http://www.kinningparkcomplex.org/directions/

Organised by: http://www.strickdistro.org/

Whose Legacy?

Friday 21st October, 2-30-4.30. Clubroom, Upstairs at The Centre for Contemporary Arts (CCA), 350 Sauchiehall Street, Glasgow G2 3JD

The Commonwealth Games 2014: Whose Legacy?

Short introductory talk by Dr Libby Porter (Urban Planner and Researcher, Glasgow Uni) and Neil Gray (Writer and Researcher, Glasgow Uni) about the Legacy of Mega-Events,  and large-scale urban regeneration plans in the UK and worldwide.

A discussion will follow with a series of live accounts by residents – including carers from the Save the Accord centre, who are campaigning to retain a day care centre for people with learning disabilities, and Margaret Jaconelli, who has recently been evicted from her home. The residents will talk about about the impact the Commonwealth Games development is having upon their lives.

This discussion, focusing on media portrayal and the right of residents to ‘stay put’ in the face of large-scale urban transformation and displacement, will be interspersed with a series of short films that highlight recent  experiences on, and nearby, the site of the Commonwealth Games Village

Includes special screening of a short film about Margaret Jaconelli and the forthcoming Commonwealth Games  by Glasgow documentary photographer and filmmaker, Chris Leslie. (14 mins) www.chrisleslie.com

Riots by Design: Blaming the London Olympics

An interesting article on the Design Altruism blog by Daniel Drenan on the role designers and design education could play in helping communities to resist Gentrification and the numerous negative affects Mega-events such as the Olympics and Commonwealth Games have on their host cities.

Amongst many interesting observations the article gives an account of a series of workshops that happened in a college in Beirut in which students were given four groups to research in terms of particular Olympic games cities and their communicated messages: The Olympic Committee itself, the host city government, the design firm responsible for the corporate identity, and any protesters they could find. The article then goes on to discuss the information gathered by the students research and the work that was created in response to it.

For up to date  information on the London Olympics the Gamesmonitor site is worth a visit.  I would also thoroughly recommend watching Five Ring Circus a film about the Vancouver Winter Olympics available to watch free online and Olympicfield a film found in the year 2015 near the London Olympics site.

in 2015 near the London Olympics site

GSA Website

The new GSA website is now live. Overlooked my ‘bane‘ suggestions.

Dixon Baxi

Dixon Baxi will be speaking at the next LongLunch, in the mac lecture theatre on the 3rd Nov. Not at lunchtime, for anyone who’s new to this. As before, as host institution, there’ll be some complimentary tickets for Com Des students. Not exactly sure how many, but if you’d like one, email me (n.mcguire{at}gsa.ac.uk) and i’ll keep an ordered list, first come first served, and let you know if you’ve managed to reserve one. Put ‘Dixon Baxi’ in the subject line, otherwise the robots who answer my email will cruelly and callously ignore it.

Amazinger

iPhone 4S – The most amazing iPhone yet“, they say. We wonder if the reality is stranger, or worse, than the parody.

Toffee firm folds

Very Observant

Via manystuff.org: Art School Observation Club.