Thursday, September 27, 2012

Week 7 //

The first group of people presented their findings of the report on Magazines and culture.

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

Week 6 //

We handed in our assessments and worked on our presentations for the following week.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Week Five // Influential Designers in Magazine History.

Magazines have an important role in society, which is driving and reflecting culture.
Designers learn from past trends and are influenced by history.
Designers should be thinking about the following:
1.     The motivating and underlying principals of the magazine and the article - what is the message that they are trying to send.
2.     The reasons why a particular design works
in a specific context (in any given period)
3.     How the past plays a part in mapping out future trends and directions.
Neville Brody's magazines (Arena, The Face) appropriated Russian constructivism. Neville implemented his views into the magazine but he communicated them in a subtle way because he didn’t want to over throw the government. He thought there was something going on that needed to be changed.

"The Face" was a magazine that was published in the UK in the 1980's. It's focus was British music, fashion and culture. It had a cool outsider status.
-->It was characterized by geometric shapes, sans serif type, large scale, graphic elements as page furniture (page numers, section names), cropping and framing, full bleed images and use of tightly cropped pictures. It revolutionized the edutorial role of type.
From deconstructing the layout we can see that Brody designed the layout to speak to young people.
Some of the characteristic of his layouts were sans serif fonts, block type, using rules and scale.
His layouts worked because he referenced a particular style.
 
Mehemed Fehmy Agha was an influential art director in 1900's. He helped to define the role of a magazine art director. He loved to experiment and was able to do so in the pages of Vogue, Vanity Fair and House & Garden.


What he brought to America editorial design was a fresh outlook. Montage, duotone, full colour photos. He favoured photographs over illustrations. He used images that went over the double page spread. 
Alexey Brodovich was another influential art director. He was a Russian immigrant and became art director of Harper's Bazaar. He was a strong leader in his field which helped him to develop the edge design he is known for today.
Characteristics of his design style:
 
-       Taking the images over the double pages
-       Single columns of type
-       Integrating image and type
-       Asymmetrical layouts
-       Lots of white space
-       He loved diagonals which created movement in his layouts.
-       Elegance, restrained typography, photography invested in lively drama
Man Rey was an Avant Garde photographer at the time and was friends with Alexey Brodovitch. Alexey would ask Man Rey to photograph for Harper's.
 




Willy Fleckhaus
Willy Fleckhaus was one of the most innovative and influential designers of the postwar era. His design was characterized by swiss formanism, grids and simple typography, cropping, massive close ups, surreal portraits and distinctive black pages. 
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In 1959, Willy was aquinted with the magazine Twen, short for twenty. It catered to the first generation of young German adults who came of age after the end of World War II. It was published from 1959-1970 when deepening political and intellectual thought, combined with increasing sexual awareness, captured the attention of its spirited audience. Twen was unmatched in its avant-garde visuals, layouts, typography and fine, literary content.

 
 

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Anachronistic 
1.The representation of someone as existing or something as happening in other than chronological, proper, or historical order.
2. One that is out of its proper or chronological order, especially a person or practice that belongs to an earlier time: "A new age had plainly dawned, an age that made the institution of a segregated picnic seem an anachronism" (Henry Louis Gates, Jr.)
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David Carson is considered by many to be one of the world’s most influential graphic designers. He describes himself as a “hands-on” designer and has a unique, intuition-driven way of creating everything from magazines to TV commercials. He has an intuitive ability to combine type and image as an expression.
Before he came into the world of Graphic Design he was a professional surfer and no. 4 in the world.

For this article, David Carson thought the article was boring and dull so he made the font Dingbats.



 
While the contents of its pages were not related to graphic design, Ray Gun magazine was founded in 1992 and proved to be an exploration of typography, layout and visual storytelling that would shift the approach of many graphic designers. The magazine appealed to 'ultra cool' people.
Terry Jones, born in 1945 in Northampton, England, is the Editor-In-Chief, Creative Director and Publisher of i-D.  For more than 30 years Terry has established himself as one of the most experimental creative directors of his generation, from the covers of Vanity Fair and Vogue, where he was art director from 1972-77, to the innovative designs of i-D magazine, which he founded in 1980. The first issue of i-D was created at his home studio and published in the form of a hand-stapled fanzine with text produced on an IBM golfball typewriter. 
Lily Cole - i-D Magazine [United Kingdom] (September 2008) 
 
 
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Terry Jones is one of the most influential designers today. His mainstream experience included Donna, British vogue magazine and American vogue magazine. But when he started working on the youth title 'I-D' Magazine, he showed his real strengths and individuality. 'I-D' was born out of the punk movement and influenced by Dadaism. It had an "anti-celebrity" stance. When designing for I-D, Terry uses design elements to create a sense of immediacy and spontaneity and used printing techniques before and after. e.g. Photocopying, moiré
Henry Wolf, the graphic designer and photographer who was the art director of Esquire, Harper's Bazaar and Show magazines in the 1950's and 60's.
 
 

Vince Frost is arguably one of Australia’s most recognized and globally celebrated and awarded designers.
-->Clean white pages with radical typography and photography define his design style.
His design studio 'Frost' creates design that intrigues people with exciting design.

  

Really loved this weeks lecture as I love magazines & editorial design. Looking at these examples today, I have come to realize the importance of thinking about the message you are trying to send through your art direction. By message, I don't just mean through the article but how does it affect the message of the overall product. Looking at these designers, it's very inspiring to see how they have left such a big mark and influence on designers after their period of time art directing.These are people who inspire me and my design. People who don't conform to what is going on but challenge and go somewhere completely different. That's what I hope to be as a designer.