Friday, April 18, 2008

Beijing Logo Design Process

I got this in an email that is going around, so I do not have a proper source to credit. But I thought it was powerful to share it with you anyway.









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Friday, September 21, 2007

Die, Speech Bubble, Die! Via Eachday.com

For a while, I worked for a company that had various speech bubbles in their corporate identity, as well as in their main logo. For the longest time I didn't think anything of it, in fact thought they were somewhat engaging... until I came across this page. And I realized that I was rather culturally insensitive not to have noticed sooner.

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Thursday, September 20, 2007

THURSDAY 25 OCTOBER 2007 6:30–9:00PM: Crouwel/Vignelli



Wim Crouwel.



Massimo Vignelli.

A rare opportunity to see and hear these godfathers of modernist graphic design and corporate identity.

From Aiga.org:
Wim Crouwel, Dutch graphic designer, exhibition designer, museum director and educator, established his first freelance design practice in Amsterdam in 1954. In 1963 he became one of the five founding partners of Total Design, so called because it was the first multidisciplinary design studios in the Netherlands. During the sixties and the seventies he was responsible for many of the posters, catalogues, and exhibitions at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. From 1985-1993, Wim was director of the Boijmans Van Beuningen Museum in Rotterdam. In 1967 he launched his New Alphabet within the Quadrat-Print series of journals published by Pieter Brattinga and his printing firm Steendrukkerij De Jong. This radical typographic experiment proposed new letterforms as a response to new technology. It was commissioned by Olivetti for a new typewriter font and although completed it was not released at the time due to changes in technology. The basis of all Wim's work is a strong underlying grid system, his typefaces being a logical extension of this grid. Within the last two years The Foundry in London has digitalized and marketed four of Wim's typefaces.

Massimo Vignelli, Italian designer of graphic and corporate identity programs, publications, architectural graphics, exhibitions, furniture and products of all kinds, has lived and worked in New York for the past four decades. Massimo studied architecture at the Politecnico di Milano from 1950 to 1953 and later trained at the Universita di Architetttura in Venice. His first professional position was as a designer of glassware for Venini, and from 1958 to 1960 he taught design at the Institute of Design, Chicago, while his wife, Lella Vignelli worked for architects, Skidmore, Owings and Merrill. In 1960, the couple returned to Milan and founded the Lella and Massimo Vignelli Office for Design and Architecture. Four years later, Massimo began creating graphics for the Container Corporation of America, and designed its new logo. In 1965, with Bob Noorda and Jay Doblin he founded Unimark International, a design consultancy originally based in Milan. Soon after, The Vignellis moved to the U.S. and in 1966 Unimark established a New York office, specializing in corporate identity. In 1971, Vignelli Associates was established and subsequently designed corporate identity programs for Knoll, American Airlines, Bloomingdales, Xerox, Lancia, Cinzano, and Ford Motors. Massimo also turned his attention to designing furniture for Sunar, Rosenthal, Morphos and Knoll, including the Handkerchief Chair and Paper Clip table for Knoll. Some of the most well-known work of the Vignellis includes directional signage for the New York and Washington, D.C. subway systems.

Alice Twemlow is the chair of a new MFA program in Design Criticism at the School of Visual Arts, which launches in the fall of 2008. Alice writes about design for publications including Design Issues, Design Observer, Good, Eye, I.D., New York Magazine, Paper, Print, The Architect’s Newspaper, and Varoom. She is the author of What is Graphic Design For? (Rotovision, 2006), StyleCity New York (Thames & Hudson, 2005) and has contributed essays to Jonathan Barnbrook’s monograph, Barnbrook Bible (Booth Clibborn, 2007), Looking Closer 5: Critical Writings on Graphic Design (Allworth Press, 2007), ELSE/WHERE: MAPPING (Design Institute, 2006), and Why Not Associates 2 (Thames & Husdon, 2004). She has directed several design conferences, including “Voice: AIGA National Design Conference 2002," and “Being Here: Craft and Locality in Graphic Design,” held in Berlin in 2004, and co-directed “Looking Closer: AIGA Conference on Design History and Criticism.” Alice has an MA in Design History from the program run by the Royal College of Art and the V&A Museum in London, where she is currently a PhD candidate.

TIME AND PLACE

Thursday 25 October 2007 6:30–9:00PM
Tishman Auditorium
The New School
66 West 12th Street
Between Fifth and Sixth Avenues

6:30—7:00PM Check-in & admission
7:00—8:30PM Presentation
8:30—9:00PM Reception

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Tuesday, September 4, 2007

Retro Animated Logos

Funny, I was just talking about one of these the other day when at home watching trailers... then ran across this amazing compilation of Retro Animated Logos on Motionographer.com.

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Thursday, May 3, 2007

Logo Cities Project & Symposium by Matt Soar



Check out the Logo Cities project by Dr. Matt Soar, including symposium starting tomorrow with a keynote address by Johanna Drucker; plus the Québec premiere of Helvetica.

From the official Website:
About Logo Cities

Logo Cities is an ongoing research/creation project addressing signage, branding and lettering in public space, with a particular focus on the city of Montréal. Logo Cities is directed by Dr. Matt Soar, Department of Communication Studies, Concordia University, and is made possible by a grant from the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. With considerable assistance from grad students Cecilia Chen, Grant Collins, AnneMarie Ennis, Lisa Gasior, and Michael Lithgow.

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Saturday, April 21, 2007

Hey, That's ME! > "National Design Association" T-Shirt



Rob Reed drew this "logo" originally for a Chopping Block press kit in 2001. Yes that is me in that silhouette. Now it is a T-Shirt available at the ChopShop.

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Thursday, April 5, 2007

Maria Magdalena Campos Pons - Exhibition Design and Branding


Elasticbrand, llc [My company] created the exhibition Design, branding and graphic design for the first retrospective exhibition by renowned cuban-american artist Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons. The exhibition was organized and developed by the Indianapolis Museum of Art and curated by Lisa Freiman. See a few images of the project here.

Buy the Maria Magdalena Campos-Pons exhibition catolog here.

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