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Tuesday, November 11, 2008
A River Runs Through It
Posted by Steve



The Esopus River is in upstate New York. But Esopus magazine is available here and here on newsstands. The Fall 2008 issue of the magazine features a wealth of exciting art and literary content and special printing effects, not to mention its regular music CD (this one, devoted to "Advice").
    Ever since Esopus began in Fall 2003, the bi-annual magazine edited and designed by Tod Lippy has attracted experimental magazine lovers. Each issue is more than a good read (or look), it is a kinetic experience, full of unusual content and exemplary special effects. For my money, it just may be the most innovative print magazine of the 21st century. For back issues, go here.



Magazines
11/11/2008 5:24:01 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)    Comments [0]
Monday, November 10, 2008
Who Designed the Obama O?
Posted by Steve


Who designed the Obama O? John Maas on bnet.com has the answer:
The Obama logo was created early in 2007, through a collaboration between Chicago firms Sender LLC and MO/DE. Chief Obama strategist David Axelrod gave the agencies a mandate: design a logo that would evoke "a new sense of hope," as he told the Chicago Business Journal. After working feverishly, the design was introduced on February 10, 2007.
Sol Sender discusses the "brand development" of the most memorable political logo in the past 50 years here. And MO/DE addresses its contributions to the campaign here with a video here. Bravo to both creators for breaking the conventional mold.

Speaking of molds, Hilary Ross and Jim Lennox of Shickshinny, Pa., painted the Obama Hope poster (100 by 70 foot) on their rural field (below). "When we were on the ground applying the colors, we couldn't tell how beautiful this mix of color fields was," Hilary told me. "Only when we climbed the tree did we know what we had done."




Branding | Design | Politics
11/10/2008 9:25:50 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)    Comments [5]
Thursday, November 06, 2008
He's Spreading Disease
Posted by Steve


Smartly designed, sometimes comic posters warning against syphilis, gonorrhea, malaria, and tuberculosis were once as common as all of the above. In An Iconography of Contagion: An Exhibition of 20th Century Health Posters at the National Academy of Sciences in Washington (through December 19), these and more recent posters about AIDS show how the advertising industry and public health officials have long fought battles against ignorance in the war against contagious disease. For more on the exhibit, read Amanda Schaffer's New York Times article or download the catalog. And for information on William Helfand's 2003 exhibit To Your Health: An Exhibition of Posters for Contemporary Public Health Issues at the National Library of Medicine, go here.






Advertising | Exhibitions | Posters | Science
11/6/2008 8:10:34 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)    Comments [2]
Wednesday, November 05, 2008
Tuesday in the Park with Zaha
Posted by Steve


The other day, the School of Visual Arts Designer as Author students visited the Zaha Hadid-designed Chanel Mobile Art display in Central Park's Rumsey Playfield. It was a gorgeous fall morning, leaves falling from trees painted with oranges, reds, siennas, and fading greens. The 7,500 square foot orb is filled with installations inspired by the quilted Chanel bag (bottom) and perfume pervades the air. A personal tour is narrated by the deep yet dulcet tones of Jeanne Moreau "discussing everything from sex and love to the secrets at the bottom of a woman's handbag," writes The New York Times. However, with everyone listening to their own prompts (i.e. "now walk with me to the stairs, and turn left") on individualized MP3 devices, visitors became willing zombies, walking slowly, mindlessly to Moreau's resolute commands.
    Some of the artworks were clever (a series of cardboard boxes, below, with witty videos projected from above showing naked people frolicking and assaulting one another with Chanel bags) and some were more tritely surreal. There was also a hint of the 1964 New York World's Fair to be found in the space-age orb that seemed to be plunked down from the heavens in the anomalous surround.
    The students left with mixed feelings. The morning was blissful and beautiful enough, but this monument to high-end commercialism (guarded by Chanel-clad docents) at such a critical period of economic distress seemed a tad out of touch with reality. But maybe that's the point.




Design | Exhibitions | Shopping
11/5/2008 8:18:13 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)    Comments [1]
What Comes After C? TD!
Posted by Steve



Just when I got used to the clunky and bulky red "C" logo for Commerce Bank (above), they pulled a bait and switch on me. This past weekend, the red and blue turned into the green of TD (below), which bought Commerce for $7 billion earlier this year. In the snap of a finger (or a switch of a light), all the branches in Manhattan changed the logo and color scheme to dollar green. But in case you were worried how this would affect the celebrity spokespeople, Regis Philbin and Kelly Ripa, they are being kept on, just like free coin counting machines.





Branding | Logos | Signage
11/5/2008 6:28:42 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)    Comments [4]
Tuesday, November 04, 2008
Election Day Memories
Posted by steve



It's hard to believe that Election Day 2008 is finally upon us. The logos below, including candidates who were once shoo-ins, others who were might-have-beens, and still others who never-have-been-nor-will-be (who in tarnation is Duncan Hunter?) serve as a reminder of all the hub and hubbub of the past 18 months.
    It is sobering to note that from the first category, the once-apparent-shoo-in Hillary Clinton was not the first almost-was woman candidate for president of the United States. Belva Ann Lockwood (above) ran for the highest office in 1884 and 1888 (before women even had the right to vote). Lockwood was a follower of women's rights activist Susan B. Anthony of silver dollar fame and the second woman, after Victoria Woodhull, to run on the National Equal Rights Party ticket. Although she received a number of votes, they were never counted. Supporters had seen ballots destroyed and called upon Congress to investigate voter fraud. Lockwood lost the elections but successfully practiced law for 43 years.


Election  | Homage
11/4/2008 4:44:45 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)    Comments [0]
Monday, November 03, 2008
Fins and Chrome, Ooh La La
Posted by steve



"To call Art Fitzpatrick an automobile illustrator," writes Dave Caldwell in The New York Times, "is to leave half of the canvas blank." Mr. Fitzpatrick is the man behind the chrome when it comes to selling cars in dreamlike illustrations "pitching a carefree lifestyle." His luminescent ads for Life, Look, and the Saturday Evening Post for Pontiac Bonnevilles and Catalinas created the aura for American behemoth automobiles (and influenced Bruce McCall's parodies (bottom) in "The Last Dream-O-Rama.") The Times refers to him as "the Michelangelo of the Muscle Car," but more than that, he is the chronicler of the American Dream. See his recent set of Fins and Chrome U.S. stamps below.






Advertising | Illustration
11/3/2008 5:50:03 AM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)    Comments [1]
Friday, October 31, 2008
Persuasive Paper
Posted by steve


How effective are posters in altering people's perceptions? Are they only worth the paper they're printed on or are they truly persuasive papers? The debate rages at the exhibition Signs of Change: Social Movement Cultures 1960s to Now at Exit Art in New York, where hundreds of posters, photographs, moving images, audio clips, and ephemera document more than 40 years of activism, political protest, and campaigns for social justice. Many of them have indeed altered perception and triggered action. Curated by Dara Greenwald and Josh MacPhee and organized thematically, the current show presents issues from Civil Rights and Black Power in the United States to democracy in China to anti-apartheid in Africa to environmental activism and women's rights internationally. "The exhibition also explores the development of powerful counter-cultures that evolve beyond traditional politics and create distinct aesthetics, lifestyles, and social organization," say its organizers. Exit Art exhibitions are famous for presenting a critical mass of unique artifacts and this one is no exception.





Design | Politics | Posters
10/31/2008 5:59:44 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [1]
Thursday, October 30, 2008
Don't Forget to Vote
Posted by Steve

Whatever your party, your VOTE is important. The following initiatives have been launched by designers to help get out the vote next Tuesday.

PLUS ONE: "Some people donate money. Most don't volunteer. But what if
everyone got just one more person to vote?" asks Scott Stowell. PLUS ONE (above) is a way to get involved that is modest and personal. If enough people do it, it really could make a difference. And if people send their PLUS ONE stories to hello@plusonevote.org, "we might have a nice collection of anecdotes to share for the future."

VOTEHOUR.ORG: This from Ji Lee: "According to the U.S. Census Bureau, in the last election, the #1 reason eligible voters didn't vote was because they were 'too busy.' This shouldn't happen in this important election. Let's encourage EVERYONE to vote!" Get employers to designate one hour on November 4 for voting. Show your boss the video on votehour.org.

NOV4.NET: From Brent & Andrew: "Promote the vote NOV 4. Let NOV4 help you get out the vote in 2008." This site sells media kits, stickers, iron-ons and tattoos (below) all with NOV 4 emblazoned in stark type.

AIGA GET OUT THE VOTE: "Help motivate your friends, family and others in your community to vote by spreading the AIGA Get Out the Vote campaign. AIGA invited designers from across the United States to create nonpartisan posters."



Design | Election
10/30/2008 4:38:32 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [1]
Tuesday, October 28, 2008
Iraqi Refugees
Posted by steve



The Iraqi diaspora may become the greatest humanitarian crisis of our time. Although the U.S. has promised to accept 20,000 out of the 4.5 million refugees, so far only a fraction have been admitted to the country. "These are truly innocent victims of the war, and in many cases, have supported American troops," says Milton Glaser, who has developed a poster campaign for the International Rescue Committee. (The one above is partly sponsored by The School of Visual Arts in New York and hangs on one of the school's buildings.)

The IRC initiative is based on interviews with, quotes from, and photographs of refugees who continue to be at risk. For more information on the IRC's involvement, click here.

This one reads: "I was first in my class and headed for college when my street became a war zone. My cousin was killed, my father was threatened. We left everything and fled. Now we are refugees. We're not allowed to work. We've run out of money. How will we survive?"


Advertising | Design
10/28/2008 8:14:00 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [0]
Monday, October 27, 2008
The Legendary Wall
Posted by Steve



"Okay, wiseguy, what would you do?" With those words, Frank Stanton, former president of the Columbia Broadcasting Company, challenged Lou Dorfsman, the creative director, who died last Thursday at 90, to devise a concept for the 35' x 8'6" cafeteria wall in the new corporate headquarters. Dorfsman replied, "Give me 30 seconds ..." and the mammoth "Gastrotypographicalassemblage" was conceived, subsequently rendered by Herb Lubalin and Tom Carnese (Lubalin's sketch below). The wall was dismantled after 25 years (once the "Tiffany Network" became the Wallgreen's network) and left to the termites. Recently, artist and illustrator Nick Fasciano obtained the nine panels, which are currently housed at The Center for Design Study in Atlanta, Georgia. Together with Richard Anwyl, he has mounted a campaign to "Save Lou's Wall." See a wonderful video here. And here is a great tribute by Michael Bierut.


Design | Obit | Television | Type
10/27/2008 8:25:46 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [2]
Friday, October 24, 2008
London Calling
Posted by Steve



I love looking at sketches, especially those of storied graphic icons. The London Underground "roundel" logo, which celebrates its 100th anniversary this month, was originally designed in 1908 by an anonymous artist, but redesigned (above) in 1913 under the auspices of Frank Pick, commercial and publicity manager of the London Underground Group of Companies, and Edward Johnston (bottom), who also designed the Underground's typeface. In 1938, Man Ray designed an extraterrestrial-looking poster that equates the roundel with the planet Saturn--it's still one of the most progressive commercial posters ever created.









Branding | Design | Logos | Posters
10/24/2008 11:09:50 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)    Comments [0]