Slanted in Stockholm: Stockholm Design Lab

When visiting Stockholm in the summer of 2021, we took a close look at the contemporary design scene. We were happy to meet great designers from the local creative scene, among them Stockholm Design Lab!

Stockholm Design Lab, an internationally recognized and awarded brand agency, has since 1998 worked internationally and domestically with a wide range of clients and sectors to transform brands and businesses with remarkable, simple ideas. The multi-disciplinary design work spans across airlines, fashion labels, spirits brands, museums, fast moving consumer goods to technology companies, cultural, and educational institutions.

Stockholm Design Lab’s work can be found in the Slanted Magazine #39—Stockholm. Additionally we shot a video interview to talk about their attitude and view of things. Take a look at our new issue and the video platform to encounter new ways of design thinking!

Portrait and studio photography: © Thomas Mandl
Product photography: © Stockholm Design Lab

Slanted Special Issue Bavaria

Slanted Special Issue Bavaria presents a selection of the best of Bavarian creativity, diversity, and intelligence!

OK … Bavaria stands for: Men in Lederhosen and women in Dirndls (traditional dresses), beer, Schweinshaxen (pork knuckles), Knödel (dumplings), Brezeln and Weißwürste, Oktoberfest, FC Bayern Munich, BMW (75.000 employees), Audi, Allianz, Adidas, Siemens, Alps, Allgäu, Munich, Nuremberg, Augsburg, Dachau, Altötting, Chiemsee, Starnberger See, and all the other lakes, Schloss Neuschwanstein (logo template Disney), Kraus-Maffei Wegmann, Airbus and MTU (most German arms exports come from Bavaria), Deutsches Museum, Pinakotheken, Neue Sammlung, Münchner Kammerspiele, Bayerische Oper, Wagner-Festspiele, Karl Valentin, Gerhard Polt, Lothar Matthäus (“I hope we have a little bit lucky”) … Stop. In the case of Bavaria, the list of clichés can be extended indefinitely. 

Until the 1950s, many still considered Bavaria to be an agricultural state—an image that even then stood for only one side of the Free State. In 1972, the Olympic Games in Munich presented the world with a civilian Federal Republic that had shed the dull gray of the post-war years and was openly looking to the future. The Weltstadt mit Herz (World City with Heart) was proclaimed. Though “The games must go on.”—Avery Brundage, then president of the International Olympic Committee (IOC), declared at the funeral service for the eleven members of the Israeli team killed the day before …

With the help of bayern design, we tracked down designers, artists, photographers, illustrators, and crafters—all people who love their region (almost a third of the Bavarian population prefers to spend their vacations in their own state) and are passionate about what they do. Clearly, Bavaria is rich. Rich in creativity, diversity, and intelligence. Our research uncovered so many findings that this issue could easily have been many times more extensive. It’s a typically Bavarian dilemma we have to face: Immer etwas zu viel des Guten! (There’s always more good stuff than you can enjoy). And we think that’s really good! Because life is really good here. Servus!

Slanted Special Issue Bavaria

Editor, Publisher: Slanted Publishers
Release: July 2022
Volume: 192 pages
Format: 16 × 24 cm
Language: English
Bookbinding: Open stitch binding
Printer: Offset, Stober Medien
ISBN: 978-3-948440-40-4
Price: € 14.– / $ 15.50
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SAUFEN

As part of Jared Grasser’s bachelor’s thesis, he created a campaign with wit and looseness that educates young adults between the ages of 17 and 27 about alcohol and its risks at eye level. In his work SAUFEN, he dispels prejudices, encourages people to take a self-determined approach, and shows them that they don’t have to live up to society’s expectations.

“Because I have chosen not to drink alcohol, I know that you don’t need it in order to have fun and balance in your life. I also know how quickly my attitude is noticed and met with incomprehension.”

The approach is not to focus exclusively on the dangers and effects of alcohol. To do justice to the educational aspect, it is necessary not only to point out the risks of irresponsible consumption, but also to celebrate alcohol-free alternatives and the decision not to drink so that they become normalized in society.

His bachelor thesis won the university’s faculty award for outstanding work.

SAUFEN

Art Direction, Design / Illustrations, and Text: Jared Grasser
Release: not officially released, finished in March 2022
Volume: 26 p.
Language: German
Format: Din A3

A Place of Daring

A Place of Daring, a house with charisma—the University of Arts Linz sees itself as an open space dedicated to critical thinking and shaping social processes. The new visual identity reflects this idea by using a fluid framework which never stands still. Embedded in a mindful layout, it provides flexible space for the various content of the students, teachers, employees, and researchers.

“As a young university that drives social change with art and cultural studies, with technologies and ideas for more sustainability, we need a corporate design that corresponds to this attitude. This has been achieved with Bleed’s open, flexible concept. I am convinced that now we will be able to show the open mind which we have always practiced to the world.” Brigitte Hütter, Rector of the University of Arts Linz.

Interactivity, digitalization, and motion define the core principles of the visual language. The mirrored logotype allows to integrate two languages at once—referring to the international mindset of the institution. The customized font Linz Sans unifies all written communication. From now on, the new corporate identity provides maximum freedom for individuality and expression of the arts.

“With the new visual orientation, the University of Arts Linz shows itself as an open, progressive house that shapes the future itself. The diversity of the university is reflected in a hybrid dialog between analog and digital applications.” says Astrid Feldner, Creative Director of Bleed Vienna. Bleed is an international branding and design agency with studios in Vienna and Oslo. More about the project here.

Dessau Design Schau

At the Dessau Design Schau a colorful mix of students from many different semesters will show their integrated design studies.

This year they have the chance to show their work live and on site in Dessau. The appearance of the Dessau Design Show was created in a project (with Prof. Brigitte Hartwig) in this summer semester with 15 students. While reading this, they will still be in the middle of producing print media, a signage system, maps, merchandise, etc.

You can expect a varied program of exhibitions, project presentations, lectures, presentations, and hands-on activities! Come and talk to the students, lecturers, and alumni and get to know life on campus! They will also be present online so you can get an insight in advance on our university portal Incom.

Dessau Design Schau

When?
July 15th – 16th 2022

Where?
Seminarplatz 2a
06846 Dessau 
Germany

Find more information here!

Typeface of the Month: Rezak

Our Typeface of the Month: Rezak is designed by Anya Danilova and published by TypeTogether.

Nothing is hidden in the simplistic forms of Anya Danilova’s Rezak font family recently published by TypeTogether type foundry. Rezak is not a typeface directly from the digital world, but was inspired by the stout presence of cutting letters out of a solid material. With only a few cuts, the shapes remain dark and simple. With more cuts, the shapes become lighter and more defined, resulting in a dynamic type family not stuck within one specific category.

Most normal typefaces change only in thickness; Rezak changes in intention, highlighting the relationship between dark and light, presence and absence, what’s removed and what remains. Rezak’s Black and Incised display styles are like a shaft of light in reverse and are perfect in situations of impact: websites, headlines, and large text, gaming, call-outs, posters, and packaging. The text styles are bold, energetic, well informed, and round out the family with four weights (Regular, Semibold, Bold, and Extrabold) and matching italics for a family grand total of ten. These jaunty styles work well in children’s books, movie titles, and subheads for myriad subjects such as architecture, coffee, nature, cooking, and other rough-and-tumble purposes.

Rezak’s crunchy letters are meant to expose rough, daring, or dramatic text. A further benefit is that this family is not sequestered within one specific genre or script, so it can be easily interpreted for other scripts, such as its current Latin and extended Cyrillic which supports such neglected languages as Abkhaz, Itelmen, and Koryak.

Rezak’s push toward creativity and innovation, with an eye on typography’s rich history, reinforces TypeTogether’s mission to publish invigorating forms at the highest function and widest applicability.

Anya Danilova is a type and graphic designer from Moscow, Russia. She obtained her Master’s degree in 2019 from Type and Media at The Royal Academy of Art in The Hague. Since then, she has made her home in The Hague and continues her type design practice as a freelancer. Anya’s Rezak family was the winner of the Gerard Unger Scholarship 2020.

Typeface of the Month: Rezak

Foundry: TypeTogether
Designer: Anya Danilova
Release: 2022
File Formats: otf, eot, svg, woff, woff2
Styles / widths / weights: Regular & Italic, Medium & Medium Italic, Bold & Bold Italic, Extrabold & Extrabold Italic, Black & Black Incised
Price per style / family: 31.50 EURO / 238.– EURO (for up to 5 users)
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Estonian Museum of Applied Arts and Design

Design shapes our daily lives on many different levels; from clothing, home objects and vehicles to houses, environments and relationships between people. The function of design has been to mediate changes in technology, science or in human thinking more broadly. In this way, plywood furniture, synthetic fabrics or coherently marked pathways have become part of our everyday environments. The concept of design has been redefined over the past decades, reflecting the predominant attitudes of the time.

The Estonian Design Museum in Tallinn shows exactly this change on several floors in an old warehouse and presents extraordinary pieces in a clear and modern way. We were lucky enough to get a personal insight from the director Kai Lobjakas, who also revealed to us that the museum will significantly expand its collection in the field of graphics. We are excited!

The aim of the exhibition is to provide an overview of the layers, characteristics and variety of Estonian design, and highlight a small selection of examples that at various times and for various reasons have shaped the local design scene, either under the name of applied art, industrial art or design. The many layers of this well curated selection represent also political and economic changes of the period, abrupt endings and new beginnings.

The story of Estonian design is still young and the Estonian Design Museum has only been collecting and analyzing materials for the past 20 years. There’s still a lot to be uncovered, so that it can become a chapter in the history of Estonian design.

Find more information here: www.etdm.ee

OmoType

OmoType offers handmade fonts designed for better letter recognition and legibility. There are several typefacesSans, Sans Variable, Serif, and Mono. These typefaces are designed by Marko Hrastovec. He was awarded with the certificate Typographic Excellence by the Type Directors Club New York in 2016 and 2019.

Nino Brodač is a typographer and graphic designer focused on developing typographic solutions. He contributed to OmoType in 2020 with the OT Carta and OT Carta Straight fonts. With 240 different styles, five extender sizes, four letter spacings, and six font weights it is a truly variable font. It is designed for better letter recognition and legibility with all the features that facilitate reading like uniquely recognizable letters, similar letters, and shapes are easily distinguished, and letters clearly define the text line, letter, and word spacing.

OmoType design stems from relevant scientific research about font readability and dyslexia. The reason to start there was to create the most readable typeface. During the development, a couple of research with dyslexic children was done to verify its effectiveness. Results show children read faster, made fewer mistakes, and had shorter fixation times when reading texts with the OmoType.

OmoType Sans is free for personal non-commercial use.

Save Brno Biennial

The Moravian Gallery in Brno, the organizer of the International Biennial, announced on April 24th, 2022, that it had “decided to abandon the regular exhibitions of the Brno Biennial and replace them with a sustainable permanent digital platform.”

Established in 1963, the International Biennial of Graphic Design Brno is one of the oldest and most important events in the field of visual communication worldwide. For almost six decades, the it has provided a major international platform for exhibitions, discussions, and relevant accompanying programs on the dynamically expanding field of graphic design, an integral part of visual culture. In addition, the Biennial gave rise to an extensive collection of graphic design, a public archive systematically broadened with each edition. Designers from all over the world have repeatedly participated in each edition. At the same time, the Biennial is regularly attended by thousands, with many visitors coming to Brno from abroad. The Biennial plays an invaluable role in education, as it influenced and formed whole generations of graphic designers who participated in its editions.

Graphic design is an integral part of the environment we live in. The Brno Biennial is the only cultural event of this kind, scope, and tradition worldwide. It facilitates a discourse in the field of visual culture accessible to everyone. The exclusively digital (and so far unspecified) platform that the Moravian Gallery attributes to the future of the Biennial cannot replace these in-person interactions and experiences.

Through this petition, we ask the Moravian Gallery, the organizer of the Brno Biennial, and the Ministry of Culture of the Czech Republic, the founder of the Moravian Gallery, to find a way—in cooperation with the professional community—to continue this distinctive international cultural event.

Cancellation of the International Biennial of Graphic Design Brno means the loss of a sixty years’ worth of heritage through which the Czech Republic connects the local and global cultural worlds, such as, for example, the Prague Quadrennial and the Karlovy Vary Film Festival does. We are losing a unique international platform whose regular reflection of visual culture is needed more than ever before in our increasingly visual media-oriented world.

Pixel Skull Art Collective

July is going to be hot! The Pixel Skull Art Collective will launch a virtual exhibition, a public sales platform, and a group show in Frankfurt.

The Pixel Skull Art Collective is setting sails destined to alter the established art scene. On July 1st the collective will open the doors to it’s trailblazing 3D virtual art space and digital art platform with 444 digital artworks (NFTs) created by 52 established and emerging artists from around the world. On July 15th and 16th a physical exhibition in Frankfurt am Main, Germany, will kick-off a series of global gallery events.

The first virtual exhibition will be hosted in a skull-shaped museum made out of 16 square rooms, each of them displaying a curation of works from established artists including Jonathan Calugi (Italy), Moriuo (Japan), John Ritter (US), Marta Veludo (Portugal), Kera (Germany), and Eduardo Foresti (Brazil)—and emerging creators alike.

All artworks will be available for purchase as NFTs via a customized minting site, that provides artists and collectors easy access to selling and buying art. The twist—prices will be the same for each artwork. Each buyer will become a part of a group of collectors that will get exclusive access to future collections.

At the exhibition in Frankfurt at Egenolff30 gallery the collective will show printed versions of the artworks next to screens that’ll provide access to the virtual gallery. Various talks about digital art and web3 will focus on the opportunities and challenges for the digital art market in the nearer future. The opening event is scheduled for July 15th at 7 p.m.. On the 16th doors are open from 1 p.m.–10 p.m.

The core Pixel Skull crew is a group of creative professionals from around the globe, with a vast portfolio of projects and experience. They are on a mission to liberate the elite art market through an easy-to-access bridge between artists and collectors.

A New Destination for Digital Art

When?
July 15th–16th, 2022

Where?
Egenolff30
Egenolffstraße 30
60316 Frankfurt
Germany

Slanted in Stockholm: Stockholm Surfboard Club

When visiting Stockholm in the summer of 2021, we took a close look at the contemporary design scene. We were happy to meet great designers from the local creative scene, among them Stockholm Surfboard Club!

Stockholm Surfboard Club was founded 2019 by surfboard shaper and designer Manne Glad. Years prior to this, Manne’s explorative approach within art, music, and craft attracted founder and Creative Director at Acne Studios, Jonny Johansson, who brought Manne to work with him. Their mutual obsession for surfboards sparked the idea of creating a space to explore the past, present, and future of surf culture, art, and fashion—all together.

Stockholm Surfboard Club’s work can be found in the Slanted Magazine #39—Stockholm. Additionally we shot a video interview to talk about their attitude and view of things. Take a look at our new issue and the video platform to encounter new ways of design thinking!

Portrait and studio photography: © Thomas Mandl

European Design Awards and Festival 2022 in Tallinn

This year’s European Design Awards and Festival took place from June 17th to 19th in one of the cosiest of nordic capitals: Tallinn. A modern city with a relaxed vibe where the historical (UNESCO world heritage site!) and cultural legacies from different eras contrast with its vibrant and creative urban environment.

Under the theme “Beyond Design,” the program included a 1-day conference, exhibitions, design walks, design talks, parties, nature walks and of course the European Design Awards ceremony.

It is not so easy to get one of the desired awards, two juries (print and digital), each consisting of 8–9 experts review all the submissions over several days to then award only a few works from a large variety with bronze, silver or gold. See a list of all winners here.

The most successful agency of the year is honored with the Agency of the Year Award. This year, the award went to Verve by Vruchtvlees. The jury prize went to Identitätsstiftung for the Courage project. Two projects also received the additional Best of Show Award, Château de Villers-Cotterêts-Cité internationale de la langue française by Chevalvert and Sakharov.space by Redis Agency.

It’s been a while since we last attended this event, which takes place in a different European city every year. And that’s what makes this festival so special: you meet creative people from all over the world and have fun together, get to know a new city and its culture, and come back with an incredible number of impressions.

I hardly know any other event where the European idea hovers so massively over everything—and that is especially important in times of war in Europe. Demetrios Fakinos, CEO of the European Design Awards, found the right words in his speech at the ceremony. It has never been more important to stand together for peace in Europe.

We’re very much looking forward to next year, when the European Design Festival will take place in Luxembourg and encourage everyone to try your luck at the awards next year!

Superfuture Design Festival

At the Superfuture Design Festival, designers from different design disciplines come together to exchange ideas, inspire, and network in talks, panel discussions, roundtables, exhibitions, and get-togethers about the potential of design as a discipline that shapes the future.

All speakers and exhibitors
Lisa Baumgarten (Critical design mediator, designer, author, researcher, and teacher/learner, GER)—#1 Am Ast sägen auf dem ich sitze
Nathalie Gebert (Media artist, GER)—Symbiotic Transmitter
Nienke Hoogvliet (Designer, NL)—(re)VALUE materials
Noa Jansma (Multimedia Artist/Designer, NL)—Buycloud
Ruben Pater (Designer/Writer/Teacher, NL)—CAPSLOCK
Lasse Schlegel, David Schwarzfeld (Graphicdesigner, GER)—Projekt Platzhalter
Daniel Szalai (Artist, HU)—Unleash Your Herd’s Potential

The Future Can be Shaped
Our present is a product of diverse creative decisions: What and how we design shapes the world we live in. But what does the future look like? What is possible? What is probable? What is desirable? And what do we design if we want to achieve what is truly desirable? At the Superfuture Design Festival in Hanover, local and international designers come together to share progressive approaches and exchange on methodologies and practices in design as a driving force for a regenerative and equal future. We invite renowned designers with impulses from the fields of design research, material design, graphic design, and design education.

Superfuture Talks
As part of the Superfuture Talks, the festival invites local and international designers. Together they address the question “What can and must design do in the 21st century to solve man-made challenges?”. In keynote speeches, panel discussions, interviews, and round tables they share their experiences in testing critical and constructive design approaches and methodologies. The Talks are an invitation to exchange, discuss and network.

Superfuture Exhibition
The exhibition Nature’s Commodities deals with the economic appropriation of nature and reflects on our relationship to other living beings. Today, nature and its industrial reproduction serve primarily the purpose of commodification and multiplication of private wealth. The exhibition shows three artistic positions: Nature as digital commodity. Nature as an algorithmically produced entity. And nature as a symbiosis between organism and technological construct.

The Team
– Festival director: Claudia Bumb, Thimm Bubbel
– Collaboration: Fernanda Braun Santos, Clara Birkmann
– Concept & Idea: Katrin Brümmer, Claudia Bumb, Thimm Bubbel, Norbert Schaal
– Artistic advice: Henner Rosenkranz, Gallery BOHAI
– Design: Bureau Bordeau, Hanover

Superfuture Design Festival

When?
Vernissage June 24th, 6 p.m. — Galerie Bohai
Talks June 25th, 3:30 p.m. — Hafven
Exhibition June 26th – July 3rd — Galerie Bohai 

Where?
Galerie Bohai
Schwarzer Bär 6
30449 Hanover

Hafven
Schwarzer Bär 2
30449 Hanover

Tickets
Reduced: 9.– Euro (incl. 1 Drink)
Normal: 11.– Euro (incl. 1 Drink)
Support: 20.– Euro (incl. 2 Drinks)
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Tickets are valid for the Talks at Hafven on June 25th
The number of seats is limited.
Admission to the gallery is free.

Photographic Pictures—By Christian Werner

“His images are among the most exciting that contemporary German photography has to offer,” cultural critic Adriano Sack wrote about the Photographic Pictures of Christian Werner.

Since the end of the 1990s, the photographer has been an integral part of Berlin’s cultural landscape. His passion for portraying fascinating people has led him to photograph celebrities like Billie Eilish, Devendra Banhart, M.I.A., Bret Easton Ellis, Harun Farocki, and Susan Sarandon for 032c, Harper’s Bazaar, Monopol, Numéro, SSENSE, ZEITmagazin, and other national and international outlets. “In Christian Werner’s photography, the subject is always simultaneously in both the present moment and the past,” said Süddeutsche Zeitung about his work. “They tell us about a turning point in our civilization. Space, time, youth, natural resources, everything seems to abound in these pictures.”

Now the photographer got a new visual identity and website by Matthias Last from Studio Last.

Photographic Pictures

Release: 2022
Design & Concept: Studio Last
Code: web3000

Together with the artists Stephanie Kloss and Andrea Pichl, the photographer Christian Werner is working on the open space in the centre of Berlin, which has long since ceased to exist, and is taking a look at what has disappeared here and what has (not) replaced it. You can visit the current exhibition Erase & Rewind in Berlin.

Erase & Rewind

When?
June 3rd–July 14th 2022

Where?
Inselstrasse 7
10117 Berlin

U-Bahn Märkisches Museum
Germany

Austrian Design Talks

Two days dedicated to the cooperation between design and business. On June 28th and 29th, 2022, the Austrian Design Talks will take place at Hollenegg Castle in western Styria. Ten successful partnerships between design and classic business will use best practice examples to show what contribution design makes to success, how the development process works, and how companies can benefit from design.

In the stylish ambience of Hollenegg Castle, in the heart of the Styrian Schilcherland, two days are dedicated to the exchange of design and business from all over Austria. The talks take a look at the people and companies behind the products and services, tell their story and provide insights into the creative process. The range of products and services in the two-day program spans from the development of furniture, vehicles, and medical equipment to control systems and the design of interiors. As diverse as the design process is, it is the decisive factor for success. The Austrian Design Talks at Schloss Hollenegg are a cooperation of Creative Industries Styria with Schloss Hollenegg for Design, designaustria, Holzcluster Steiermark, WEI SRAUM Designforum Tirol, and CampusVäre.

Preventing falls with an intelligent 3D smart sensor, tracking one’s own menstrual cycle with the help of a breathing air analyzer and an app, or fighting cigarette consumption with Quismo. These and other exciting projects will be discussed during the two days at Schloss Hollenegg for Design. Because the demands on new products and services are constantly increasing. Not only innovative functionality and uncompromising aesthetics are required: Current topics such as sustainability, social responsibility, and future viability must also be the development of new products and services.

Österreichische Designgespräche

When?
Tuesday, June 28 and Wednesday, June 29, 2022 (registration until June 24, 2022)

Where?
Hollenegg Castle for Design
Hollenegg 1
8530 Schwanberg
Austria

Tickets
Registrate here 
Price: € 90.– (day ticket) or € 150.– (2-day ticket)
Limited number of participants
The event will be held in German

For further information click here

Die 25 Schönsten Deutschen Bücher 2022

The Stiftung Buchkunst selected Die 25 Schönsten Deutschen Bücher 2022 (The 25 Most Beautiful German Books) of the year. 645 entries competed for the coveted awards.

In Die 25 Schönsten Deutschen Bücher competition, two juries of experts selected the 25 most beautiful books of the year in an elaborate process. For seven days, 14 jurors discussed the submitted novelties. The 25 selected books are exemplary in design, conception, and processing and show a wide range of design and manufacturing possibilities.

Stephanie Ising, creative director at HERBURG WEILAND in Munich and juror for the 2022 competition on this year’s jury work: “I really enjoyed being part of the jury. I was convinced by the production quality of individual titles. You simply notice that you don’t get very far in the book trade with standard solutions anymore.”

The Preis der Stiftung Buchkunst, worth 10,000 euros, will be announced at an awards ceremony in Frankfurt am Main on September 2nd, 2022. This will be selected by a third jury from the 25th Most Beautiful German Books. In which framework the award ceremony can take place under the given circumstances will be announced in the course of the summer.

The winners of the second Förderpreis für junge Buchgestaltung competition have also been announced. This year, 180 entries competed for the three prizes of 2,000 euros each. This competition, organized by the Stiftung Buchkunst, honors particularly innovative and forward-looking projects that conceptually advance the medium of the book.

See all awarded books of 2022 here

WDCD × Posters Can Help

WDCD × Posters Can Help worked together on an exhibition for the 10th What Design Can Do Live in Amsterdam. The exhibition was on display in the main lobby area where participants got their coffee and tea during the breaks. The team of WDCD picked some of the posters that have been submitted so far to Posters Can Help to exhibit great works and raise awareness for this project.

Hope, resilience, and people power take center stage at What Design Can Do’s tenth edition in Amsterdam. What Design Can Do Live marks a major milestone with a sold-out festival at the Internationaal Theater Amsterdam.

On June 3rd 2022, What Design Can Do (WDCD) made a triumphant return to Amsterdam with the long-awaited tenth edition of its annual festival. A sold-out crowd of nearly a thousand creative activists and innovators gathered at the International Theater Amsterdam to explore how design can help us reshape our lives in the face of a planetary crisis. Leading the conversation with a potent mix of urgency and optimism were a dozen of the world’s finest change makers, including graphic designer Eddie Opara, architect Marwa al-Sabouni and filmmaker Josh Fox. Though their perspectives were diverse, one message rang clear: in turbulent times, creativity can offer us a powerful and hopeful way forward.

Design that Moves the Needle
The festival was opened with a warm welcome by moderators Ikenna Azuike and Saskia van Stein. Rousing performances by the Marmoucha Orchestra and DJ Mark the Machine set the tone for a festive but challenging day of talks and workshops. Award-winning photojournalist Kadir van Lohuizen was first to take the yellow stage, demonstrating how visual storytelling can help people understand the human costs of climate change, from rising sea levels in Kiribati to mounting landfills in New York City. The morning also saw a thought-provoking talk by emerging designer Amber Jae Slooten, who shared her vision of an alternative fashion industry built on digital garments and powered by a generation of “new creators.” Crowd-favourites Maria Conejo and Zoe Mendelson wrapped up the first half of the day with a joyful presentation about the mission behind Pussypedia, a beautifully-illustrated guide to women’s health that shows how information design can move the needle on critical issues like gender equality. Adding a different point of view to the mix was climate advisor Yvo de Boer, who used his time on stage to discuss how creative strategies can generate political action. As he sees it, it is not always a lack of will that stands in the way of societal change, but also a lack of imagination.

Calling for Community
Besides showing examples of what design can do for society’s problems, speakers also laid out a blueprint for how: looking at the kinds of processes that we must adopt if we want to deepen our impact as creatives. “Part of my belief as a designer is that community is everything,” said Adebayo Oke-Lawal, the creative rebel making Nigerian fashion more inclusive. His was one of many talks that stressed the social responsibility of design, reminding us that the best solutions are those which are deeply embedded in their local contexts. One of Mexico’s most prolific architects, Enrique Norten, built on this idea by exploring how good urban design is about building connective tissue between people and the places they live in. “Every day our cities are becoming more and more populated,” he noted. “So my question is: How can we weave together a new social fabric of the city that is more just and equitable?”

In the second half of the day, speakers dove deeper into why social justice is not an add-on but a prerequisite to climate action. Cultural landscapes expert Julia Watson delivered one of the day’s most eye-opening talks, exploring what we can learn (and unlearn) about resilience from Indigenous communities around the world. Syrian author and architect Marwa al-Sabouni followed this up with a powerful reflection on how the design of our streets and buildings can affect our sense of shared prosperity, safety and belonging. “All cities today struggle with crises, whether it’s a housing crisis, the environmental crisis, or a crisis of violence,” she explained. Moving forward, she invites architects to “break the cycle” by daring to question the belief systems that got us here in the first place.

This interest in the way we practice design rather than its outcome was also clear during the afternoon’s series of breakout sessions. Many focused especially on how we can better take care of ourselves and each other in the effort to build a more active, diverse, and inclusive industry. In the workshops Gender, Design, and Power and Decolonising Design, festival-goers joined activists from the Netherlands and beyond for an open conversation about how to recognize and dismantle systems of oppression in our daily lives. During the Circular Design Jam and Pitch Podium, young innovators and creatives came together to explore how to make a regenerative future not just accessible—but attractive—to people from all walks of life.

I Live in Hope
The festival reached its conclusion with a spirited talk by graphic designer Eddie Opara and a searing performance by Oscar-nominated filmmaker Josh Fox. Both underlined the galvanizing role that creativity plays in a time of what seems like insurmountable challenges. For Opara, a Black designer who grew up in 1970s London and now leads one of the most influential agencies in New York City, it provided a tool for addressing injustices and for “living in hope.” For Fox, who is known for his unflinching documentaries on social and environmental justice, it is a way to alchemize despair into energy for the climate movement. Without it, we would be standing still in the face of our most urgent problems. Fox made quick proof of it that day, bringing the crowd to their feet with a spellbinding piece about healing, humanity, and our relationship with nature.

On this note, the curtains closed on an extraordinary tenth edition of WDCD Live in Amsterdam. All visitors, volunteers, and crew then joined the speakers on stage to raise a glass together during the afterparty co-hosted by Dutch design organizations BNO and ADCN. There was a sense of camaraderie in the room as the crowd talked over the day’s takeaways. As one visitor put it, it’s clear we’re facing an uphill battle. “Still,” he said, “I keep being surprised by the power, resilience, and creativity of people who are working to find solutions to break the status quo.”

Photos by Enrique Meesters and Laura Ponchel. Courtesy of What Design Can Do.

Slanted in Stockholm: teenage engineering

When visiting Stockholm in the summer of 2021, we took a close look at the contemporary design scene. We were happy to meet great designers from the local creative scene, among them teenage engineering!

teenage engineering develops highly acclaimed products for people who love sound, music, and design. teenage engineering are known for products such as OP–1, the portable wonder synthesizer, the OD–11 ortho directional wireless loudspeaker, pocket operator series, OP–Z, the pocket operator modular & OB–4 the magic radio. teenage engineering is based in Stockholm, Sweden. The company was founded 2007.

teenage engineering’s work can be found in the Slanted Magazine #39—Stockholm. Additionally we shot a video interview with one of the founders, David Eriksson to talk about his attitude and view of things. Take a look at our new issue and the video platform to encounter new ways of design thinking!

Portrait and studio photography: © Thomas Mandl

nomad 12

nomad is a magazine that promotes issues concerning quality of life, sustainability, and society by curating the ideas of a growing global creative community. nomad 12 is out now and available at Slanted Shop!

How are living spaces defined and shaped by society, design, and architecture? The nomad team travelled from Munich to Berlin, crossed the Italian Alps, and jumped from the UK to the US—interviewing visionaries, pioneers, and designers around the globe by asking: how do they define and shape living spaces? How does architecture interact with nature, with leisure design, with working environments? Which is the most sustainable way in all of this? And what needs will people have?

Their tour started in Munich’s city centre, interviewing Axel Meise on how he went about shaping “a new culture of light.” Heading west of the city to Neuhausen, Professor Markus Allmann spoke to Oliver Herwig about the quality of a dialectical approach. Up near the River Rhine, Frank Wagner talked to Dr. Marc Brunner and Steffen Kehrle about the nate collection. Sigurd Larsen and Georg von Hausen outlined their inspiring philosophy of sustainable products, as designers of the first piece of furniture that comes to mind when talking about living spaces: sofas. Sophie Dries delves into the challenges of designing those private spaces.

Former startup founder Frederik Fischer aims to reinterpret rural living with a new community mindset and has developed the KoDorf (co-village) concept. The nomad team spoke to Markus Bader, architect, professor at Berlin University of the Arts and co-founder of raumlabor in Berlin, and read about his excitement of the unexpected—be it in the form of people, events, or experiences. From Berlin to the Italian Alps, they met up with Tobias Luthe at MonViso Institute—a real-world lab for trialling sustainable living spaces.

The changes wrought in our living environment by the advance of digital technologies are a long-standing preoccupation of London-based architect and UX designer Keiichi Matsuda, who examines what they mean for our daily routines and how fiction can enhance our understanding of our possible futures. Karianne Fogelberg held a transatlantic Zoom interview with Rania Ghosn and El Hadi, and Kimberly Bradley portrayed Lisbon-dwelling curator and architect Mariana Pestana.

Contents
Ania Molenda: Weaving Care into the Web of Life—Mariana Pestana: Harnessing Imagination—Tanja Pabelick: Aqua Incognita—Tobias Luthe: Mind Follows Nature—Frederik Fischer: The Digital World is Nothing but a Very Poor Simulation of Community—Markus Allmann: Why do you build things, anyway?—Keiichi Matsuda: Blending Realities—Rania Ghosn & El Hadi Jazairy: Narrating Fables for Tomorrow—Markus Bader: Floating University—Marc Brunner & Steffen Kehrle: Bringing something new into the world—Axel Meise: My main job is basically to keep saying no till everything’s perfect—Sigurd Larsen & Georg von Hausen: New Era. New Mindset.—Sophie Dries: A Question of Scal

nomad 12

Publisher: hw.design gmbh
Design: Veronika Kinczli, Frank Wagner, and hw.design gmbh 
Release: May 2022
Volume: 216 p.
Language: English
Printing: offset-printed
Paper:  full color on uncoated and coated paper

Format: 23 × 26 × 1.7 cm
ISSN: 2513-0714-12
Price: 14.– Euro
BUY

Captcha Design Festival 2022

Each year a new team of students from the Design Faculty of the University of Applied Sciences in Mannheim plans, organizes, and finally realizes the Captcha Design Festival 2022. This tradition came to life in 2014 and has been going on ever since, inspiring young design-lovers with exciting workshops every year a new.

This year’s festival follows the topic of symbiosis, concentrating on the harmony of analog and digital design. Captcha Design Festival takes places on August 29th until September 1st, 2022, followed by the exhibition in the Mannheimer Kunstverein. There will be three workshops lead on by excellent designers and artists, where the participants can widen their horizons in disciplines such as typography or illustration.

Captcha Design Festival 2022

When?

Symposium:
August 29th, 2022 (Jugendkulturzentrum Forum)

Workshops:
August 30th–September 1st, 2022 (Jugendkulturzentrum Forum)

Vernissage:
September 2nd, 2022, 6 p.m. (Kunstverein Mannheim)

Exhibition:
September 2nd–9th, 2022

Where?

Jugendkulturzentrum Forum
Neckarpromenade 46
68167 Mannheim

Kunstverein Mannheim
Augustaanlage 58
68165 Mannheim

For more information click here

Peridot PE

Peridot PE is a multifaceted sans serif type system designed by Pria Ravichandran and Kostas Bartsokas, it is available at Foundry5.

“We burnt the midnight oil and sweated over minute details to present a high quality ten weight family with slanted italics in six widths and the coveted variable format!”

Peridot PE is loaded with personality; try the different stylistic variants to change the typographic tone depending on your mood. The combination of widths and styles makes this type system an exciting typographic palette for the discerning designer.

Peridot PE currently supports three scripts—Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic—covering over 370 languages. It includes all required localized variants, tabular numerals, and currencies, fractions, clever discretionary ligatures, and many more features. This type system performs in varied environments—from branding, display, corporate use, editorial, advertising, poster, web, screen usage, etc. Think of any other use case as well and Peridot PE will perform.

This type system comprises 120 static fonts, family packages, and variable support. It is the gem you ought to have in your collection.

“Mesmerized by a sparking greenish-yellow mineral called Olivine hidden within black basalt in the lava fields of Lanzarote, we decided to name the gem of our library after this beauty.”

Peridot PE

Latin designed by: Pria Ravichandran and Kostas Bartsokas
Cyrillic and Greek designed by: Kostas Bartsokas
Script support: Cyrillic, Greek, Latin
379 languages
Styles: 120 Styles (six widths, ten weights + italics)
Release: 2022

Available formats: otf, ttf, and woff2
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CXI Conference 2022

After a two-year break enforced by Covid, on June 3rd the CXI Conference 2022, Europe’s biggest Brand-Identity and Corporate-Design Conference, finally opened its doors again!

800 guests—designers, agencies, creatives, and design-enthusiastsmainly from all over Germany came together in the Lokschuppen in Bielefeld to listen to five talks related to branding and design processes, to get inspired, and to learn something. Speciality of the CXI: You don’t only hear about a design process from the perspective of the designers and agencies—the client is also represented and shares their point of view during the (re-)making of their brand.

This year, too, there was a colorful mix of presentations, of big and smaller agencies and companies from many different businesses.

The day started with a presentation by Telekom × MetaDesign about the big transition of the Telekom brand. Clearly there are a lot of obstacles when you touch such an established and world famous brand which once had many different branches. Under the Motto “The future is liquid” they opened up the Corporate Identity to new elements and color nuances (besides the well known magenta) in order to modernize the brand.

Next up was Berliner Philharmoniker × Studio Oliver Helfrich, who successfully capture the energy, power, and autonomy of Berliner Philharmoniker in a new dynamic and modern branding. The new appearance is supported by lots of motion design representing the liveliness and movement of music.

In the last talk before the break, three parties reported about their journey of building a (new) brand after they merged two companies: Atruvia × KMS TEAM × VIM GROUP. An important opinion to take away from this talk: “Every brand must be understood and wanted.” With lots of sensibility they created a new brand independent of the two old company names that managed to capture the new synergy without any inherited issues. 

Networking and exchanging ideas with colleagues or fellow students during the break over a good vegan curry is just as good as listening to the lectures in the dark lecture hall, listening to the speakers.

After the break, GRIPS Theater × Formdusche inspired the visitors with a passionate presentation where you could feel the love for the brand and the design. Following the motto “Reduce to the Max,” Formudusche created a brand identity that was composed of existing nostalgic and fresh new elements to attract attention in Berlin, especially of kids—totally in line with GRIPS Theater’s Motto: “Don’t grow up-it’s a trap!”

Last presenters were mousesports × EIGA—a peculiarity, as Esports is neither particularly widespread nor well-known in the majority society. They told full of verve about the nerve wracking design process of the new logo and design, and about how hard it is to say goodbye to a well-known and also loved (by some) logo after 20 years. But here, too, the transition succeeded and now the new, loud, and strong brand presence inspires.

It’s not just the presentations themselves at CXI Conference 2022 that are inspiring, it’s also the atmosphere, which is full of excitement and passion for the subject matter that has brought everyone together in Bielefeld. People (especially designers) love these details, they love to hear about the struggle that happens in the design process—in small and big agencies, with small and big clients—that they experience themselves in the work life.

The surrounding of the conference is also lovingly prepared: CXI Conference 2022 bags and beautifully crafted and embossed cardboard boxes manufactured by Letterjazz. Inside you could find an information brochure about the talks and speakers, a notebook—both on appealing MetaPaper—and a pen, so you do not have to forget a single thought or inspiration. This year’s CXI-motto “be clear, be bold” was visible everywhere on shirts, posters, and the bags, bringing across this important message clearly. 

We are already very much looking forward to the CXI Conference next year, which will be on May 26th, 2023!

Slanted in Stockholm: Our Polite Society

When visiting Stockholm in the summer of 2021, we took a close look at the contemporary design scene. We were happy to meet great designers from the local creative scene, among them Our Polite Society!

In 2008, Our Polite Society was founded by Jens Schildt and Matthias Kreutzer. They worked with the Kunstverein Bielefeld, the Sandberg Institute, the Bauhaus Dessau, and also realized self initiated works like Our Form of Book (2016), The FACIT Model (2019), and Constant Change (2021). OPS teach at Rietveld (Amsterdam), Konstfack (Stockholm), and KABK (The Hague). Since 2017, they publish typefaces as OPS Type.

Our Polite Society’s work can be found in the Slanted Magazine #39—Stockholm. Additionally we shot a video interview to talk about their attitude and view of things. Take a look at our new issue and the video platform to encounter new ways of design thinking!

Portrait and studio photography: © Thomas Mandl

HfG GRADUATES 21/22 & Munitions Factory

Last Thursday, two exciting exhibitions opened at the HfG Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design: HfG GRADUATES 21/22 (02.06.–19.06.22) & Munitions Factory—exhibition on the history of a monstrous space (02.06.-12.09.22) on occasion of the 30th anniversary of the HfG.

Titled HfG GRADUATES 21/22 – All we as – the exhibition gathers diplomas, master theses and PHDs in the university’s atriums. 34 graduates were finally able to present their final projects from the years 2021 and 2022 to the public in a very beautifully designed exhibition. The exhibition catalog published for this purpose provides detailed information on the individual works on display.

The accompanying program has been developed in close collaboration with alumni and includes guided tours, workshops, screenings, performances, as well as panel discussions with our guests.

This year we’re together again.
(irl and beyond)
All we as leaves
clouds
moss
waves
light
All we as membranes
All we as futurists
All we, a mountain range
All we in hands
All we, crafting things
All we in a show

Opening Hours
Tue–Sun, 11–18

Address
Staatliche Hochschule
für Gestaltung Karlsruhe
Lorenzstr. 15
76135 Karlsruhe
Germany

The exhibition Munitions Factory, curated by Thomas Rustemeyer, examines the history of what was once the “largest weapons factory in the world.” It illuminates the transformations and ruptures of this “monstrous space” and questions the development of the area of the former weapons factory up to the present day.

It is a very nice idea to open the exhibition at the same time on the occasion of the 30th anniversary of the HfG, after all, the students form a unit with the building.

Hallenbau A—which today houses the Staatliche Hochschule für Gestaltung (HfG), the Zentrum für Kunst und Medien (ZKM), and the Städtische Galerie-was built during and for World War I by “Blitz architect” Philipp Jakob Manz as a production hall for the Deutsche Waffen- und Munitionsfabrik in Karlsruhe. With 30,000 factory workers, this factory was as large as a small town during World War II. During the Nazi era, female forced laborers from all over Europe had to work here under inhumane conditions. Because of the munitions and weapons that were produced here, the place is involved with various wars and conflicts in the world. After the decline of industrial production, the vacant premises served as working and presentation space for Karlsruhe artists from 1981 to 1989. The creative potential recognized there subsequently led to the institutions ZKM, HfG and the Städtische Galerie moving in.

Research materials from various archives, such as the Karlsruhe City Archive, the Karlsruhe General State Archive, and various picture archives, trace the history of this “tremendous space.” Artistic and documentary projects by students, alumni and (former) professors of the University of Arts and Design represent critical examinations of the site and its heterogeneous and controversial history. The exhibition is created in the context of the 30th anniversary of the HfG. The exhibition will be accompanied by a publication in the series Munitionsfabrik.

Both exhibitions are absolutely worth seeing!

Photos from the archives: © Evi Künstle