The book of The Ark Museum is designed based on the concept of ancient European museum books, in response to artist Tu Wei-Cheng’s focus on the idea of “self-systematization” in his artwork. Its layout imitates and incorporates the style of old civilization books, resembling classic literature with its large hardcover binding and rounded spine. It also features deliberately aged antique bronze hardware clasps, enhancing the gesture of “opening” the book, as opposed to simply flipping through it. This design echoes the idea of The Ark as a carrier that saves multiple species from disasters, as well as the diverse and exotic civilizations collected within the book.
Utopia is on the Road
A glimpse into the intersection of modern bicycle technology and Bauhaus mentality: The “Utopia is on the Road” collection by Tecta consists of three specially painted bicycles, created in cooperation with Open cycles, which are accompanied by selected pieces of furniture. Based on the designs of textile artist and Bauhaus teacher Anni Albers, art director Dominik Kirgus developed the frame design. The challenge was to design around differently shaped round tubes with varying radii. The catalogue bundles the collection back onto the surface—showcasing the bikes and furniture in action.
Concept, Layout & Typesetting: Tobias Groß, Tonda Budszus
Photography: Constantin Meyer, Lennart Kramp
Dhanya
The book is the result of the experiment done during the lockdown period of Covid 19. I had read and selected poems written by Indian Prime Minister Mr. Narendra Modi to write in calligraphic style. Since there was scarcity of materials during lockdown period, I had creatively composed these poems on my old used paper having strokes, background, alphabets etc. after understanding the emotions and reference of the poems. Each composition is unique with various stylization of calligraphy. In this attempt I have considered to connect Gujarati language literature with calligraphy art.
TECTA Katalog 2022
A catalogue for furniture manufacturer Tecta—Actually it is more of a magazine. A magazine about design, proportions, materials, colours, people and, last but not least, products. Just as idiosyncratic as Tecta itself, this medium goes its own way, telling stories of experimental, beautifully shaped and bold design, of flexibility and extreme static.
Concept: Tonda Budszus
Layout & Typesetting: Tonda Budszus, Chan Sperle, Martin Schüngel, Elena Rohloff
touch grass
AI generated type experiment based on an image of grass
—the phrase touch grass is “used when someone is doing something weird, stupid, or pointless. it means they need to come back to reality, they need to get some fresh air and get back in touch with how the real world works.”—urbandictionary.com
This project was on view @ Tate at the Cyborg Futures digital display.
print: Digitalpress
type: Neue Montreal
paper: Cromatico Extra White 180g
Bauhausbroschüre—homage an die fraue
The bauhausbroschüre is an experimental publication that presents the work of the women whom worked in Bauhaus. I have selected 3 different media for which I have created paraphrases inspired by the works of Anni Albers, Judit Kárász and Söre Popitz.
The publication should be understood more as an object, which I have tried to make tactile, experiential and at the same time informative for the reader by using different materials.
print: Digitalpress, TCN Sign Studio, Copyguru
paper: offset paper 120g, keaykolour cobblestone, lichen, steel 120g, tracing paper and transparent foil
type: neue haas unica w1
Budai Rajziskola, 2022
Hexenhaus
Light, poetry, nature, lightness, complexity, openness—the central motifs of the architecture of the “Hexenhaus” (Witch House) by the famous architect couple Alison & Peter Smithson have also guided the design of the book about this “House for a Man and a Cat”. The work documents the conception and the design and transformation process of the house, which has been ongoing for more than 30 years, with construction drawings, letters, quotes, further texts, historical and current photographs.
Concept, Layout & Typesetting: Martin Schüngel
Architecture-Photography: HG Esch
Maternal Love
Reflecting on my own personal relationship with my mum – that’s how the concept was born. I wanted to create an object for a book that could be seen as far from ideal-almost perfect. An object that we basically take care of, because it is fragile and important to us. As we get closer we discover flaws and damages hidden in the small details of the object, but we still find it beautiful. The object represents the final state of the relationship, where I have now performed the symbolic gesture of closure. This is a kind of letting go on my part, where I took control.
plaster and acrylic paint, 2023
Sketch
What do we call development?
The development of something towards completion, change; reaching a more
advanced state.
Development is a process driven by
experimentation, trying out new variations and situations.
I demonstrate this with the basic visual elements of graphic design. I’ve
generated different compositions of
ellipses, rectangles, lines and text using the tool of coding.
Type Specimen design
For this project I have chosen a stencil font and I wanted to highlight the function that a stencil can be easily painted on every surface. I put smaller pages into the book and I designed them as if the paper was sprayed from certain pages, some contents are covered by the smaller pages. I made the creative pages manually (I used fire, lipstick, bleach, and sprayed walls and hair). The cover is separatable (silicon) can be used as a stencil. The consulents were: Dávid Molnár and Tamás Marcell.
Rotting sounds – Embracing the temporal deterioration of digital audio
Although digital data are adorned by the myth of lossless transmission and migration, everyday experience does prove the existence of degradation and data loss in various forms. The artistic research project Rotting Sounds has investigated the causes, mechanisms, and effects of such deterioration in the context of digital audio.
The accompanying publication takes on a similar ruthless approach: during the course of research all trash was collected and has been shredded to dip paper. The sheets produced determines the entire book edition of 20! As an addition a digital publication is being offered decaying from download to download.
Editors: Almut Schilling, Thomas Grill, Till Bovermann
I Sanmicheli — A Journey Across Eleven Houses and Three Generations
The book is an autobiography about my uncle’s childhood in rural northern Italy during the economic boom. The projects archive my uncle’s memories while also reflecting on the concept of “book as object”. As my double role as nephew and designer, the book became a reflection on the relationship between writer and designer, making and translating a book, visual and written language. The three main concepts of the book are space, time and memories, which have been visually and structurally reinterpreted within the physical properties of book. For instance: The navigation system of the book is time-based. Months and years are mark the progression of the reading instead of page numbers.
Organised Chance — Open_collab: Global/Local
Organised Chance documents the insights gained from Open_collab: Global/Local, a collaborative workshop created by Patrick Thomas. The workshop was held as part of Melbourne Design Week, which was organised by Chris Norman and Wayne Smith. The publication provides an opportunity to further explore design systems that embrace randomisation through interviews, visual essays, and analytical studies.
Each edition of Organised Chance is completely unique. Using a generative layout system built in Processing, alongside variable printing techniques, the design of the publication itself becomes an experiment in designer/algorithm collaboration.
The posterized book
A selection of book covers for Tyrfi publication, with texts of new and established writers from the wide spectrum of literature (novel, poetry, essay, etc.)
Design techniques from the opposite pole of printed communication – the poster – were applied in visual syntax, image and text intergration as well as the overall books design, challenging the established book visual devices and structure aiming to a hybrid book for a generation of readers who, as El Lissitzky mention 100 years ago, grows up with a different relationship with the world and space, with image and color and teaches a new plastic language.
PP Eiko Type Specimen
The EIKO typeface was designed by Caio Kondo, a Japanese-Brazilian rooted type designer. His main inspiration is his country of origin, Japan. During the creation of this type specimen, I focused on Japanese writing culture, especially Japanese calligraphy. I chose a scroll as the format for the publication, based on the proportions of calligraphy papers. After creating the type specimen, two of my colleagues and I created a structure to help scroll through the pages of the final product.
Thonet Reimagined
A catalogue accompanying the exhibition “Thonet Reimagined” curated by Jörg Schellmann for his gallery in Munich. Thonet Reimagined features contemporary art created to celebrate the 200th anniversary of the legendary furniture manufacturer. The catalogue embodies the main feature of Thonet furniture—bent wood—through choice of typography and form. The design of the book’s edges highlights the processual nature of the featured works and reinterpretations by the artists—especially when the catalogue is bent.
Concept: Chan Sperle, Tonda Budszus
Layout & Typesetting: Chan Sperle, Tonda Budszus
Typeface: CS-Serpentine by Chan Sperle
Verbum
Does our character determine the countries where we are born? The theme of this magazine was to compare the criteria of aesthetics of different countries through alphabets and fonts. Two quite popular alphabets were compared – Latin and Cyrillic. The comparison was made through a selection of the constituent cultural environments.
Překročit hranice / Grenzen überschreiten
Překročit hranice / Grenzen überschreiten, an almost thousand pages thick bilingual book project is presenting newly published / addapted dramatic texts of german writers, that have been during years 2019–20 performed in the theater Činoherní studio in Ústí nad Labem. The text disappearing/appearing in book binding, soft translucency od 80g Munken paper, bilingual layout & word-numbering of pages are reflecting nature of the colaboration project of theaters along czech-german border, in Ústí and Dresden. Our aim was to pull the reader in the flow of rare dramatic texts, not to bore on thousand pages, not to make self-served design. photo: Tomáš Lumpe, Jiří Dvořák / Print: Indigo Print, Praha
Country of Birch
It’s not a book, it’s a protest! It is an opportunity to tell what is really going on, about how people in Russia feel under the oppression of the authorities. In this zine, the metaphor of the ‘Country of Birch’ (sometimes we call Russia that, it has a lot of national, native meaning) turns into a metaphor about severe censorship and the prohibition of one’s opinion. This story is about confrontation in spite of it.
Sorry i fucked this up
“Sorry, I fucked this up” is a collection of Polaroids by photographer Melina Papageorgiou, taken in Berlin, Hamburg and Greece from 2013 to 2020. They capture everyday situations, portraits of friends and encounters. The cover as well as the title of the work “Sorry, I fucked this up” come from a Polaroid labeled with these words. By enlarging the images heavily and consciously cutting out the classic white frame of the Polaroids, the images become rougher and appear closer. Flaws common to instantly developing photos, such as burned-out dots, the red-eye effect, under- or overexposure, and blur, are now amplified.
Alternative books movement and continuous aproaching of them.
A key emphasis of Thermal House is its cooperative and inclusive potential, and they organise various community-driven workshops. Works and publications can be produced flexibly, quickly and efficiently, avoiding the time-consuming process of mainstream publishing, by locally available material and producing and distributing in sustainable amounts.
For practicality and sustainability, there is a reduction in the print format (print rolls of 58mm width) and print quality (to half-tone black and white raster), which is contrasted to the overwhelming presence of contemporary glossy images. Authors and readers are confronted with a page-less, endlessly designed, reading experience.
Trilogy
The project is about creating a new collection named « Trilogie », which aims to explore an alternative way of understanding architecture through photography, text and drawing. Neither a photography book nor an architectural essay, it nevertheless relies on images and text to restore, by the means specific to the book object, the experience of wandering through an architecture, from context to detail. Coming after a first prototype issued in very few copy (less than 200), dealing with the work of the architect and teacher Jean-Patrick Fortin, Trilogie Grachaux launch the collection for good. Each new issue will feature an architect, an author and a photographer.
Forma Oberta Collective
The collaborative magazine Forma Oberta is edited in an non-ordinary format in terms of design and periodicity. It follows the rythm of the stations. Creators from all around the world participate in the magazine in different languages with different formats (from essays to graphic design or poetry), shaping the editorial line of the magazine. The main distinctive feature of FO is the Open Edition Process: It is based into an anonymous bi-directional and constructive feedback to all the entries by all FO members. To avoid dogmatisms, the final decision of publishing or not each creation is taken in an uncentralized way and it emerges from the pool of individual opinions.
The Hidden Life of an Amazon User
The Hidden Life of an Amazon User project by Joana Moll exposes Amazon’s often unacknowledged exploitation of users, which is embedded at the core of the so-called internet companies’ business strategies. Such strategies rely on apparently neutral user experiences afforded by attractive interfaces. These interfaces obfuscate sophisticated business models embedded in endless pages of indecipherable code, all of which are activated by user labor. In turn, these strategies have a significant energy cost, part of which is involuntarily assumed by the user. Thus, the user is not just exploited by means of their free labor, but is also forced to assume the energy costs of such exploitation.