The Margin of Error

The Margin of Error, by photographic artist Emanuel Cederqvist, continues the work started by Axel Hamberg one hundred years ago, depicting Sarek’s National Park in the north of Sweden. In the book Cerderqvist places Hamberg’s archive photos next to his own taken in the same area.

Published in 2019 by Blackbook publication. In collaboration with Karolina Eriksson

The book is designed with both the past and the present in mind, making it look at home both in a modern bookshelf as well as in a century old archive.

Two images, taken in the same place, one hundred years apart, meet each other on the cover.

Wounded By The Storm

Stormskadad / Wounded by the storm by photographic artist Mari Lagerqvist explores a forest where shrubs, log piles and damages made by storms are left undisturbed. The images investigate the structures, patterns and compositions that are created by decaying branches and tree trunks.

In collaboration with Karolina Eriksson

As a compliment to the images, we created a low key design with a muted color scheme. The typeface has a high contrast between thick and thin lines, gi

MEDIATING ASIA

An Asian Perspective takes a geographical approach to explore art through the medium of technology in Asia. In the main visual design, the blue interface of the blank screen is combined with the “geographic latitude and longitude lines” and ubiquitous “window interface,” weaving together a sense of visual imagery that is both expansive and immediate.

End credits

60 verses like ends title and 60 illustration. How to lay out in a not-boring way? I made the graphic design to transform the book into a piece: a totally black and white and centered text just like movie ends titles are. Two different paper, coat for text and recycled for illustration.

Tshuà Tsháu-jû: Myth, Stage and the Backlit Fort Provintia

The monograph is divided into two volumes, “Catalogue” and “Texts,” based on the attributes of exhibition works, research materials, and document files. The “Catalogue” primarily presents pages on the artist’s life, “Artworks,” “Temple mural works,” “Temple maps,” “Postcards,” “Clippings,” and more. The “Texts” mainly includes research papers by scholars related to the artist. The book’s layout aims to systematically classify the artist’s fascinating and diverse life and work into a monograph with a hierarchical relationship, bidirectional reading, and appreciation and research properties. It focuses on how to handle the integration of the pioneering artist Cai Caoru, who had two identities

Zalotay

The publication commemorates the work of Hungarian architect Elemér Zalotay (1932-2020), in particular the concept of the “Ribbon House”. The plan was designed to solve the housing crisis of the post-war years, following in the footsteps of Le Corbusier’s utopian concept of architecture, and was broadly conceived as a megastructure of 20-30 storeys, over a kilometre in length, based on a new construction method. The plans were never realised, as the designer was labelled an enemy of the pro-Soviet Hungarian regime and his ideas could not be brought to life.

“Knowledge”

The topic of my university project was “development”. I used the rules of my school department as an expected form of development. I highlighted the rules to remember them so that I can become a “good” graphic designer. The strict rules are leaking on the back of the paper, because the designer cannot be limited.

Archive of Floating Things

Between Danube kilometre 1902 (Orth / Donau, Austria) and 0 (Sulina, Romania), all kind of flotsam is being fished out of the Danube with a landing net, measured and documented. The artist tries different approaches on how to “read” all the collected materials and she invites the viewers to discover. Besides the tangible aspects, she also touches on questions of the creation of value, of permanence and durability, and the paradox of holding on to something ephemeral.
2023, self-published, multi-part publication, riso & digital print, flexible edition of 100.
Supported by MS-FUSION A.I.R., Federal Ministry Republic of Austria, Culture Moves Europe Mobility Fund and a lot of individuals.

The New Generation and Artistic Modernism in Ukraine

This is a book about a powerful phenomenon in Ukrainian art – Ukrainian modernism and the avant-garde of the early 20th century. At the same time as Jan Tschichold, Piet Zwart, and Guillaume Apollinaire, in Ukraine worked Mykhail Semenko, Vasyl Yermilov, Borys Kosarev, Anatol Petrytsky, and the other artists. For a long time, they were remained in the shadow of world art history due to the colonial policy of the Soviet Union towards Ukrainian culture.
Meanwhile, history returns in cycles, and the works of the Ukrainian early 20th century avant-garde are once again becoming pretty similar to current trends in graphic design. The design of the book itself was a modern take on our predecessors.

Futur 3 Catalog

Futur 3—»a future that will not have taken place«—is an art festival from Northern Germany, proactively initiated by artists, for artists; it stands for diversity and autonomy. The catalogue provides a platform for all those involved. More than a documentation, it shows the process and its outcome – a presentation of the festival’s reflection. It offers a perspective for the future of the festival and an understanding of one’s own action in the current art context. The design responds to this interlocking structure by using three complementary fonts and a variable type area – revealing the diversity of art and giving ephemeral artworks their own permanent and equal place.

heftl 1 – Following the Danube

The first “heftl” (~booklet) is a declaration of love for the Danube, an abstract travel diary between Belgrade and Sulina.
2020, self-published, 48 pages, riso-printed, handbound, edition of 80. Awarded as “One of the most beautiful books in Austria 2020”.

Various up- or recycling projects emerge from this publication, working with its’ paper-leftovers as a resource: Danube Carpets (weaving paper-carpets with the bleed paper strips), Danube Paper (scooping paper with paper left-overs and Danube water), Part of the Flow (upcycling leftover prints in secondhand or found frames).

Man Who Captured the Landscape

Continuing the visual planning of the exhibition, the album “The Wind Catcher – Fang Qingmian’s Images and Returns” is designed to resemble a vintage family album with its antique bronze ring binding and hardcover fabric texture. The unique blue color used in the main visual is incorporated into the front and back pages, implying that this album is not just a collection of photographs but also a dialogue on contemporary art and its significance, before delving into the content co-created by the curator and contemporary artists and image makers.

Das OETZ Archiv

Das OETZ Archiv: A book about the former OETZ-magazine from Düsseldorf, Germany.
A special feature of this book are the chapter separators consisting of pages folded into each other. The additional free space created by the folded pages implemented a haptic orientation system which allows readers to navigate easily through the chapters or the registers.

OETZ is a magazine made by design students from Düsseldorf, Germany. It was published from 1979 to 1987 under the direction of Helmut Schmidt-Rhen.
The most prominent aspect of this magazine is the asynchronous binding which is placed 8 cm of the left paper edge. This created short pages on the first half and wide pages in the second half.

INTERPHASE

My final project, Interphase, is a book whose entire content was generated by multiple artificial intelligences. The book consists of seven stories based on the seven deadly sins. Thereby, my goal was to check what the AI thinks about these topics, because a collaboration with an artificial intelligence also requires to be aware of its moral values. Three text AIs wrote the individual stories in collaboration. I provided the initial input in the form of a sentence. The rest was generated by the AIs themselves in a cascading manner. A fourth AI generated additional images based on the texts. All seven stories provide deep insight into the diverse mindsets of AI. (Whole book see Website above)

BLACK BOX – TONY OUSLER

The exhibition proposition of “Black Box” immediately brings to mind an imagining of a “dark and mysterious space”. This space could be an endlessly contracting container, guiding the audience into the artist’s investigation of mysterious phenomena and media history, or it could be a reflection on the limits of science and a sensory preview of video and installation spaces in Tony Oursler’s work. At the same time, it led us to create a laser surface of dazzling, colorful media light, placing the main title and visual elements on top, using silver foil card with laser film, and distributing it on exhibition VIP tickets, invitations, exhibition brochures, and album covers.

The Ditch

The Ditch, by photographic artist Emanuel Cederqvist, recounts the story of a forgotten defence line built on Öland, a small island on the east coast of Sweden, during the Second World War. The line was intended to act as an obstacle for tanks, splitting the island into two parts near the village of Föra. In the book, Cederqvist’s images are combined with documentary material from the Swedish War Archive, records which remained classified until the 1980’s.

The cover is screen printed with white pigment on a blue paper and debossed with a glossy transparent foil.

Archiv der Aspekte

The publication “Archive of Aspects” summarises all the archives created during the course, including their individual elements. Mass, repetition, development, system, parameter, algorithm were keywords we dealt with. The publication deals with the creation of a personal graphic archive which is composed of e.g. generated shapes, colours or words.

Dispute Islands

An atlas of disputed island territories that shows
all the conflicts in relation to the exclusive
economic zones. Each of the island
disputes is accompanied by a photographic
component based on Google satellite images, map and informational page.

Narbut. Studies. Memoirs. Letters. [A Supplemented Reproduction of the “Narbut Anthology”, destroyed in 1933]

Heorhii Narbut was one of the main Ukrainian artists and graphic designers of early 20th century. After his death, a collection of memories by his colleagues was published to honor his memory. But the Soviet authorities destroyed this publication for censorship reasons. Only two incomplete book fragments preserved, and nowadays it has finally been published.
It is not known what the original cover was like. So we created an algorithm that generated a unique collage of the works shown in the book on the cover of each copy. So, each of the 1000 copies of the first edition has its own unique, unrepeatable cover. The last copy of the edition has a white cover and is the property of the designer.

Heat of Sand

by Satoshi Tsuchiyama.

Satoshi, a visual artist from Japan who currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY, won the Landskrona Foto & Breadfield Dummy Award in 2020. He visited Israel and Palestine between 2017-19 to witness the normal everyday life in the religiously and culturally rich region. During his visits, he explored the scorching sand and graffiti-filled streets, and captured the singular beauty in the raw, tough and vulnerable ordeal of perseverance and adaptation of the inhabitants. Part of his work was documenting the contemporary dance scene.

Published in 2022 by Breadfield Press

Epic and Elegy

Chen Fei-Hao’s creative mediums and dimensions span “text,” “photography,” “moving images and spatial installations.” For this project, the artist hopes to create a comprehensive presentation of his personal life experiences and creative/exhibition materials since 2013. In terms of conceptualization, we quickly focused on the idea of a “file box” format, hoping that this would be a data box with a hierarchical relationship and contextual references. The content includes a “historical epic” with a conventional narrative and a “requiem” that outlines obscure anecdotes and stories. The two complement each other, weaving together the artist’s research context over the years.

Line_Boundary_Trace

L_B_T explores the border as a divisive line from the dual perspectives of humans and machines. Archiving both satellite images of land characterized by border conflicts and artificially generated images of those same landscapes using RunwayML, the publication’s contents become animated, evolving fluidly, when the reader flips through the pages. As images of different locations become distilled into a singular gestural stroke, losing specificity and familiarity, the book is a speculative archive as well as a challenge to the arbitrariness in which we lay claim to our borders.

Hous purchase & Nightwood

The book pair is a combination of the radio play “Hous purchase” by W. Hildesheimer and the novel “Nightwood” by D. Barnes, which Hildesheimer has translated into German. A conversation between a buyer and a seller takes place in “Hous purchase”. A block of text rotated by 90° picks up their strange dialogue. The two speakers interlock in the middle. “Nightwood” tells the story of the night culture of various characters from the 1920s. Areas of life condemned by society become more visible as the story progresses. The colouring of the pages ranges from white to dark grey, emphasising the dark mood of the story. The brightly coloured soft cover and Japanese binding unite the two books.

Persimmons

Persimmons is an interactive book, translating poetry into art through linguistic analysis and code. Its inspiration is derived from the beauty of words and the structure of language systems. Words taken from a poem by Li-Young Lee, “Persimmons”, are analyzed linguistically through Rita.JS and run through Processing, to generate patterns corresponding to the text’s phonetic structure. The reader can interact with the poetry in book form, using pull tabs that morph the text into its coded patterns and manifest Lee’s words into a visual form.