The cold fact popsicle is an awareness appetiser. It’s not meant to sweeten your day. It’s not meant to point fingers at you either. It’s a simple serving of ice cold facts, giving you a heads up on our planetary situation. And hopefully, a reminder to take part in cooling down the Earth together.
[Photos by: David Stjernholm]Mark Gowing: Inside the Oblong
With the limited-edition volume sold out, Formist is pleased to release a new edition of Mark Gowing: Inside the Oblong. This updated edition features an essay by Eye Magazine’s John L. Walters alongside the foreword by design writer Kevin Finn.
Mark Gowing: Inside the Oblong collects twenty years of posters by the esteemed designer and is a portrait of his uncompromising process for commercial clients and his own personal practice. Over 288 pages the book explores the rhythms, proportion, and dynamics of the oblong space that is the poster. The work is divided into five broad categories: Commercial, Exhibition, Film, Music, and Practice. The posters display an approach to type, image, and pattern that is immediately recognizable as Gowing’s and no-one else’s.
As Finn writes, “Gowing deeply understands the rules of design, yet regularly breaks them without restraint. He frequently uses the poster format in the same way one might use an artist’s canvas: as a means to express ideas, to experiment, to challenge, and to discover new things in the process.”
Always with an audience in mind, the works featured include posters for the Sydney Opera House, Venice Art Biennale, Australian War Memorial, Sherman Contemporary Art Foundation, Preservation Music and Hopscotch Films, as well as a selection of personal works, including the Warsaw Poster Biennale Gold Medal-winning Oil Kills Peace. As Walters explains, “Gowing gets to the heart of each subject. The posters map his understanding of nuanced, multi-dimensional content (art shows, talks, performances, architecture, films) on to what graphic design can do within the four corners of a flat surface, the ‘oblong’ of the title.”
The first 60 pages of the book feature photographs documenting process, display, and various exhibitions Gowing’s posters have appeared in, printed bronze ink on black paper. The texts are set in a custom typeface designed by Gowing using a rigorous grid, resulting in a sharp and unusual feel.
Mark Gowing’s work has been exhibited and published around the world. He has received numerous international awards from staples such as Graphis, the New York Type Directors Club, and the Tokyo Type Directors Club. In 2008 he became the first, and only, Australian to win a Gold Medal at the International Poster Biennale in Warsaw. A member of the Alliance Graphique Internationale, his work is held in numerous institutional collections including the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum in New York, USA.
Mark Gowing: Inside the Oblong
Publisher & Design: Formist
Volume: 288 pages
Format: 240 × 170 mm
Essay: John L. Walters
Foreward: Kevin Finn
Typeface: Formist Graph by Mark Gowing
ISBN: 978-0-6485963-5-6
Price: $ 50.–
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Damascus Modular Typeface
The Damascus Modular Typeface is based on the characteristics of the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus, Syria. The ancient mosque is particularly known for the columns in its courtyard. For the type project, the shapes of these columns were deconstructed and turned into a modular grid system. As a result, positive and negative forms reflect the domes of the mosque, while ornamental letter connections create the impression of arcades.
While the mosque is surrounded by chaos of war today, the typeface is intended to give an idea of what the city of Damascus is truly about: the majestic splendour of Islamic architecture.
To be creative, practice
Achtung: hochgeladen von Slanted > credits müssen noch erfragt werden.
~COLLINS Ideas
ED: Paul Jun
Snifform
Look, observe, search, experiment. Sniffing the city and discovering its language. Snifform is a project by Husmee that invites everyone to participate in a collective graphic design project.
As in the past with projects such as Timeless Massimo Vignelli or 60 Helvetica, Husmee is now developing another project of its own: Snifform.
This project aims to explore and test urban morphology in all its aspects and dimensions, from basic static figures to the formal dynamics of digital space.
Starting from a photograph, using basic geometry and the Snifform grid as a base, shapes are (de)organized and synthesized in a layout system to form one or more graphic pieces that resemble the core structure.
On November 19th, 2021 the website was launched and on Instagram the base document and the Snifform grid were shared to invite everyone to experiment graphically and participate with their own exercises.
The purpose is to bring two cents to graphic design, away from ties and commercial demands, encouraging people to experiment, explore their urban environment, and have fun creating graphic pieces in a common and collective project.
The project is open to anyone who has the curiosity to experiment and the will to enjoy in a graphic sense, with absolute freedom.
Snifform
Visit the website to get more informations and download the grid to be part of the project. You can check out the exercises on instagram.
Processing Type—Getting lost in the infinity of letter forms
This poster shows an extract of digitally generated variations of the letter X using Processing. The tool is built on the principles of parametric design with which an infinite number of variations can be created. Each of these experimental letterforms is created from the same origin by changing the existing parameters of the base form. The functionality of the letters was not the focus of this exercise, the focus lay rather on the changeability of the letter’s form and therefore its expression. The beauty of generative design is that it will always surprise you with unexpected results.
frei fühlen
frei fühlen (feeling free) is a book by Cora J. Pereghy about her individual journey to self-acceptance, narcissistic views of humanity, and feminist independence.
As the stigma “generation unable to commit” was triggering the 25-year-old German author Cora J. Pereghy for a while already, she felt the desire to take a stand concerning this topic and write a book about it. Cora always felt addressed by the expression but never identified with it. She rather understood herself as someone boycotting the common type of (romantic) relationships. In a combination of essays and prose underpinned by her own graphics Cora J. Pereghy thus elaborates the stigmatization “generation unable to commit”: She shows herself undressed and emancipates. For the readers. For herself. For her generation. For sex, for love, for freedom. And she shows that her generation is not as hopeless as ascribed to it. Maybe … that’s what the readers have to decide.
The design of the book was originally created as a final project in communication design at the Mannheim University of Applied Sciences in Germany.
frei fühlen
Author, Design: Cora J. Pereghy
Publisher: Engelsdorfer Verlag
Release: September 2021
Format: 19 × 13 cm
Volume: 160 pages
ISBN: 978-3-96940-221-4
Language: German
Price: 11.80 €
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dark side of the moon
typographic reinterpretation of the iconic pink floyd cover
Color Combination Calendar 2022
The year is coming to an end, make now already sure that 2022 will be a colorful year. The Color Combination Calendar 2022 by Luzia Hein offers 53 color combinations to brighten up the upcoming year.
Already from the outside, the calendar reflects the theme of color–all four edges of the book block are colored, on three pages there is a color cut in dark wooden green and the binding is colored in a rose tone. Inside, a double page for each week of the year is designed with a seasonal color combination, alternating bright and muted tones, full color areas meet compositions with more white space. For a bright color reproduction and a matt surface, the calendar was printed with HP Indigo. All pages of the calendar can be detached from the book block, so that each card can also be used individually as a to-do list, postcard, grocery list or wall decoration. The 2021 calendar edition was awarded as a winner of the ADC competition.
Color Combination Calendar 2022
Design: Luzia Hein
Format: 14.8 × 10.5 cm
Volume: 55 pages
Paper: Fedrigoni Arena rough white 300 Gramm/sm
Print: AusDruck Berlin
Edition: 100
Price: € 29.–
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Entercourse of the New Age
The studio was commissioned to design the new visual identity of the Art publisher Entercourse of the New Age.
The graphic system fits itself in a modular logic, playing with architectonic figures, in response to fundamental operations mobilised by the publisher : reproduction, exhibition-space, and reinterpretation of their uses.
Psychespermia
Is the mind located inside the brain or as some mystics and visionaries throughout history
believed, it exists outside and beyond the brain’s neurological activity? This is one of the most fundamental questions and a definitive answer to it – as impossible as it may be – would have overreaching consequences for many parts of our philosophical understanding of the world. There are many pieces of evidence which when carefully and openly examined, would point to the notion of the mind’s fluidity and expansive nature.
Shape Grammars
Shape Grammars is a study on generative shapes, asking: how can unique pieces be mass produced? Based on the work of Sol LeWitt Jannis Maroscheck designed and programmed production systems that are able to draw an unlimited number of individual graphic shapes. Each of the simple rulesets explore a geometric principle. The result is a systematic catalog – a kind of dictionary of shapes – for browsing forms and their underlying formulas. With over 150.000 shapes, sorted from the strictly geometric to the organically free, the book is a useful manual for Designers, Architects and everybody working with shapes, showing the nature of infinite variation through automated design.
Level Quatre
Level Quatre is a series of unique screenprint on fabric. 120 cm x 80 cm. 2016
100FOR10
More than 100 artists, photographers, and designers have already had the pleasure of creating their very own version of a 100FOR10 book, and we would like to introduce you to three of them who have focused primarily on type design.
100FOR10 is an art project initiated by Melville Brand Design in Munich, Germany. Print is dead—is never dead. To publish a book is a bad idea—is a very good idea. 100for10 is a series of art books, of which each issue contains 100 black and white pages and costs only 10.– Euro. 100for10 is distributed world wide! Robert Frank said during an exposition at the Münchner Akademie der Bildenden Künste “Cheap, quick, and dirty, that’s how I like it.”
Matteo Bertin: Image Based Types
Matteo Bertin is an Italian art director who wants to design experiences to improve communication between people. He is passionate about experimenting with typefaces, which is how his new book Image Based Types came about.
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Chris Campe: Alphabets
Writing and creating have always been a part of Chris Campe’s life. She started out as an apprentice at a bookshop and wrote book recommendations for the local newspaper before deciding to become a designer. With her Hamburg-based design studio All Things Letters she finally found a way to combine all of her passions. Alphabets is a reflection of her daily work.
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Petra Dočekalová: Sketchbook
Petra Dočekalová not only has finished her PhD thesis about new type forms, but has also been a member of the Briefcase Type Foundry team since 2013. Her Sketchbook for 100FOR10 consists of type styles, trials, and tests she encountered during her learning process. The book is intended to serve as a source of inspiration and can be modified or expanded as desired.
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100FOR10
Pages: 106 pages
Publisher: Melville Brand Design
Language: English
Binding: Paperback, Perfect Bound Paperback
Product Size: 13.97 × 21.59 cm
Color: Black & White
Price: € 10.–
TOCA ME 2022
On March 5th, 2022, once again TOCA ME 2022 Design Conference will take place in Munich’s Alte Kongresshalle with renown speakers from all over the world.
Since 2003 TOCA ME Design Conference brings together some of the most innovative designers from around the globe. Covering all fields of analogue and digital design. From graphic design, typography and film to creative coding, virtual reality and machine learning. Past participants include legends of design such as Joshua Davis, Jessica Walsh, Seb Lester, Erik Kessels, Malika Favre, Yuko Shimizu, Annie Atkins, Mr Bingo, Anthony Burrill, Eike König, Gmunk, Tomato, and many more. Aside of a high-quality lineup, the beautiful prepared location with interactive art installations, a design books and magazines corner and additional showcases, creates a unique experience—a journey full of creativity and inspiration.
Amongst the speakers for TOCA ME 2022 is award-winning director and filmmaker Ali Kurr from London, and Mitch Paone, founder of New York and Geneva based creative agency DIA Studio. Furthermore computational artist and neurographer Mario Klingemann, and graphic and motion designer Tina Touli, who will also direct this year’s official Opening Titles. The talks on stage are accompanied by installations and actions of local creative heads.
Once again TOCA ME 2022 Design Conference will be one of the main events of the Munich Creative Business Week taking place from 5th to 13th March, 2022. TOCA ME is funded by bayern design and the Bavarian Ministry of Economic Affairs, Regional Development, and Energy. The event is supported by its partners Adobe, Eventwürze, and Druckerei Vogl. Organizer is the Munich-based design studio TOCA ME.
TOCA ME 2022
Artists:
Ali Kurr
Mitch Paone
Tina Touli
Mario Klingemann
Josephine Kaiser
When?
March 5th, 2022
Where?
Alte Kongresshalle
Am Bavariapark 14
80339 Munich
Germany
Book your ticket and find further information here.
New Grammar of Ornament
We are happy to announce that the book New Grammar of Ornament by Thomas Weil is now available at Slanted Shop!
Ornaments are omnipresent: they can be found on buildings, fabrics, jewelry, tiles, ceramics, and wallpaper. Scorned at the outset of the modern age, ornament has long since returned to architecture and influences design drafts as much as tattoo motifs. In New Grammar of Ornament, German architect and designer Thomas Weil compares current ornamental objects with the results of archaeological research on ornamental artifacts, and concludes that there is an anthropological constant. From the recurring arrangements of stripes, rectangles, triangles, and dots and the frequency of the forms of floral ornaments used, he derives a new “grammar of ornament.” More than 160 years after Owen Jones’ publication of that name, New Grammar of Ornament is a new reference work. It categorizes the variety of ornamental forms used worldwide and places them in a major art and cultural-historical context.
Thomas Weil (born 1944) studied architecture at the Technical University of Munich and early on focused on interior design and design. Since 1974 he has been working on the subject of ornamentation, which he has incorporated into numerous facades and walls as an artist. He gives national and international lectures and courses on ornamentation and is a lecturer on ornamentation at the Munich Academy of Design and Art.
New Grammar of Ornament
Author: Thomas Weil
With contributions by Heinz Schütz, Manuel Will
Design: Boah Kim
Format: 17 × 24 cm,
Volume: 336 pages, 386 illustrations
Release: 2021
ISBN: 978-3-03778-653-6
Language: English
Price: € 35.–
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Rundgang at HfG Karlsruhe
Today we would like to invite you to the Rundgang at the HfG Karlsruhe taking place from December 9th, 2021 to January 6th, 2022.
Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design (HfG Karlsruhe) is proud to present its Rundgang 2021/22. From December 9th to January 6th the atriums of HfG Karlsruhe will become a vast exhibition space. More than 400 students from the fields of Exhibition Design and Scenography, Communication Design, Art Research and Media Philosophy, Media Art, and Product Design give visitors insights into their artistic and theoretical work, products, designs, and concepts. The public will be confronted with the ideas of a new generation of artists and designers, curators, scenographers, philosophers, art historians, film directors, and photographers.
Exhibits will take place on various presentation areas that cross the atriums on the first floor and which the students are allowed to appropriate with their works. The projects are divided according to subject areas; however, many interdisciplinary works will also be shown. The open architecture of the building, which gives the university its special atmosphere, is marked with architectural elements. The arrangement of the exhibition walls and platforms creates passageways and visual relationships.
The Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design (HfG Karlsruhe) offers a unique space for dedicated learning, research and experimental development. In order to learn how to deal with a complex and diverse reality, studies at HfG Karlsruhe are consistently organized across disciplines: anyone who studies theory also gains skills in creative and artistic practice. Conversely, studies in art or design engage in theoretical reflections. This combination of degree programs in Communication Design, Product Design, Media Art, Exhibition Design and Scenography, Art Research and Media Philosophy thrives on the greatest possible freedom: Students have the opportunity to develop according to their own interests and strengths, to determine their individual focus and to develop a personal profile in conclusion. As new technologies evolve over the next few decades, independent minds are more in demand than ever. Against this background, the university has also decided to keep the Diploma and the Master’s degree. A huge variety of international partnerships with renowned universities enable students to put what they have learned into a global context. At HfG Karlsruhe there are about twenty students per professor. In small groups and through project-oriented work, each individual receives optimal support. Additionally, an excellent range of technical equipment and diverse workshops offer the best possible training. Studying, teaching and research at HfG are in close cooperation with one of the best and most innovative museums in the world—the ZKM, Center for Art and Media. HfG Karlsruhe ties directly into the ideas and concepts of the Bauhaus tradition—a tradition in which the design of the future is seen as a central social task.
The Rundgang will open on December 9th, 2021 at 6 p.m., but just for internal students. From December 10th to 12th, the HfG will then offer a wide range of art, music, and literature performances, film screenings, lectures, and guided tours of the exhibition. The final day will be January 6th, 2022 (ZKM Open House Day), when visitors will be able to participate in various event formats throughout the day.
Rundgang at HfG Karlsruhe
When?
Opening: December 9th, 2021, 6 p.m. (internal event)
Exhibition: December 9th to 12th, 2021, 12 p.m. to 6 p.m. (2G+)
ZKM Open House Day: January 6th, 2022
Where?
HfG Karlsruhe
Lorenzstr. 15
76135 Karlsruhe
Germany
Check the website for an overview of the events and an opportunity to browse through a selection of the works of our students.
Typeface of the Month: Subtil Grotesk
Our Typeface of the Month: Subtil Grotesk is designed by Thomas Thiemich and published by Type By boutique foundry.
Functional—check! Low contrast—check! Sans serif—check! At first, Subtil Grotesk may look just like your next Helvetica-class sans serif. “Helvetica?”—you might ask. Yes, Subtil Grotesk is a telling sample of a world where the dominance of the serious post-Great-war Grotesque—such as Monotype Grotesque No.1/10, Helvetica, Folio, Akzidenz, News Gothic, Venus, and more—persuaded type designers to explore, by and large, that class.
Fast-forward, over the past twenty or so years and counting: the digital revolution has pushed the pure, rational, and often-called neutral Grotesque somewhat aside, making room for a new hybrid sans serif class—the NeoGrotesques. Subtil Grotesk belongs to this new class, but it stands out: true to the classical notion of a Grotesque, yet infused with warmth and elegance that are masterly understated, near-invisible. Its humanistic design features add on and can be felt without a shadow of a doubt.
Everybody knows that new times often ask for renewed design solutions. So Subtil comes forward with a set of cool and characterful design advantages—it’s a sans serif that defies the proverbial coldness by embracing warmth, concedes neutrality to sensitivity, and brings serious play to otherwise a traditionally strict design construction.
Subtil Grotesk is a fine design. But there is more to it: Thiemich is a master of precision, functional experimentation, and long-lasting quality. And these qualities shine bright in Subtil: a typeface of remarkable legibility, with a generous x-height, and packed with an extensive range of typographic features for the die-hard design aficionados, who seek nothing less than reliable design tools. And who would disagree?—Long live fabulous typographic tools!
Typeface of the Month: Subtil Grotesk
Foundry: Type By
Designer: Thomas Thiemich
Release: December 2020
File Formats: OTF, TTF, WOFF, WOFF2
Styles: 16 / widths: 1 / weights: 8: Thin, Light, Blond, Normal, Medium, SemiBold, Bold, ExtraBold + Italics
Price: starting from € 45.– (excl. VAT)
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INQUE
INQUE is a beautiful annual literary magazine dedicated to exceptional new writing. It documents a decade that will usher in a new era. It will run no advertising, have no web version, and publish only ten issues.
From Dan Crowe (publisher of Port magazine and Granta book editor) and Matt Willey (BAFTA-nominated creative behind the Killing Eve title sequence, partner at Pentagram design studio, and former art director of The New York Times Magazine) comes an ad-free title dedicated to publishing diverse global writing alongside extraordinary art, design, and photography, with an editorial remit to be creatively groundbreaking. For ten years only, INQUE will be released as a large-format portfolio of newly commissioned works by international writers and artists. INQUE will chronicle a pivotal upcoming decade as a limited-edition collector’s item to be kept and cherished, in defiance of throw-away culture and mass market media consumption.
Contributors are carefully selected by INQUE’s prestigious editorial board, which includes acclaimed authors Hanif Kureishi and Niven Govinden, Pulitzer-winning New York Times writer Wesley Morris, and leading publishers Simon Prosser and Sharmaine Lovegrove.
The list of extraordinary international talent featured in INQUE includes:
– Christopher Anderson, Photographer
– Paul Davis, Graphic Artist
– Helen Marten, Artist and Author
– Tamara Shopsin, Author and Designer
– Paula Scher, Graphic Designer and Painter
– David Lynch, Director and Artist
– Tilda Swinton, Filmmaker and Writer
– Jason Fulford, Bookmaker and Photographer
“It is a ten-year creative document, an ad-free hybrid magazine set to the rhythm of its time, showcasing new talent alongside living icons and commenting on what will be an extraordinary decade.” — Dan Crowe
Acclaimed author Jonathan Lethem (The Fortress of Solitude; Motherless Brooklyn) will write a new novel over the course of the ten issues of INQUE. The launch issue includes a profile of the bestselling Norwegian novelist Karl Ove Knausgård and the first installment of INQUE’s Dead Interview series, in which Margaret Atwood interviews George Orwell.
These literary and fiction features will appear alongside cutting-edge art and commentary; master potter, artist, and author Edmund de Waal will write about an extraordinary ceramic work in all ten issues and art historian Andrew Graham-Dixon kicks off Issue 1 with a lead feature on How looking at art has changed since 1500, and again now post-Covid. In addition to portraits of the contributors by Jack Davison and Christopher Anderson in each issue, there will be limited edition runs (up to 500) of original artworks by leading artists and photographers available exclusively on the INQUE website to accompany special issues.
Free from the constraints of advertising, commercial partnerships, and rushed editorial processes, INQUE has rid itself of anything that might stifle artistic expression. The result is a bold and unique magazine that allows the unbridled creativity of extraordinary writers, artists, and designers to flourish. A magazine created to reflect the decade, INQUE will be as daring in its content as it is in its concept.
INQUE Magazine—Issue One
Editor-in-Chief: Dan Crowe
Senior Editor: David S. Wallace
Contributing Editors: Harriet Moore, Adam Moss, Cillian Murphy
Art Director: Matt Willey
Printed in a limited edition of 6,000 copies
Format: 43 × 24.5 cm
Volume: 232 pages
Language: English
Price: £ 55.–
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Design Shifts
The new publication Design Shifts documents international guest lectures and experimental typographic posters from over ten years of Lunchtime Talks, Dinnertime Talks and Degree Show keynotes in the Media Design study program at DHBW Ravensburg and is now available at Slanted Shop!
On 248 pages, Design Shifts presents more than 100 event posters and graphic experiments for international guest lectures. As a visual response to each talk, design professor Klaus Birk and committed students, lecturers, and alumni designed individual typographic posters for the respective events. The poster compilation is supplemented by short descriptions of all lectures, as well as five contemporary essays by selected former speakers: Sarah Boris, Nina Juric, Sarah Owens, Florian Pfeffer, and Roland Stieger.
As a degree program, the DHBW Ravensburg actively promotes insights into contemporary discourse in art and design. More than ten years ago, they therefore launched the Lunchtime Talks (LTT). This informal format, open to the public, turns lunch breaks into lectures: so far, more than 120 guests from international art, design, and media contexts have been visiting the university in Ravensburg to talk about their work. Design legends such as Ken Garland (UK), Jonathan Barnbrook (UK), Jost Hochuli (CH), or Ruedi Baur (F) have already been there, as well as publishing expert Karin Schmidt-Friderichs, the Decolonizing Design group with Pedro Oliveira and Luiza Prado (BRA), or the editorial team of form design magazine.
For each LTT, media design students and alumni design typographic posters in collaboration with Prof. Dr. Klaus Birk. The visual outcomes have since become graphic collector’s items and enjoy international resonance. More than 100 posters have been designed so far. Reason enough to publish all LTTs together with their individual posters. The designs and textual announcements are complemented by five short essays by former guest speakers on personal positionings within current design discourses.
Design Shifts
Editor: Klaus Birk, DHBW Mediendesign
Publisher: Prima.Publikationen
Design: it’s mee, Basel
Release: September 2021
Format: 19.8 × 29.7 cm
Volume: 248 pages
Language: German, English
ISBN: 978-3-9821198-5-4
Price: € 35.–
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sturbock
Today we would like to introduce you to sturbock, an inspiring platform for people who want to live a conscious life away from mass consumption without giving up the idea of design and aesthetics.
The brands that sturbock presents deliberately focus on authentic brands with charm and a special story, which is made accessible to you at sturbock—both on the website and on social media. Either you browse through the diverse product feed, click through topic-specific sets that facilitate the search for the right product, or read exciting articles in the sturbock magazine.
Especially during the Christmas season, the topic of consumption is omnipresent, because don’t we all love gifts? It doesn’t matter whether we receive them or give them away to our loved ones. For sturbock, however, the most important thing is what we consume. They care about the origin of the products, the materials used, the people and stories behind the products and brands. They want gifts to make sense again and, most importantly, they want the recipient to enjoy them for a long time. How nice is the idea of giving sustainability as a gift? That’s why sturbock has put together stylish gift sets. There really is something of everything—whether organic wine, natural cosmetics, fair fashion, or interior products from Germany. So you can find the right gifts for all your loved ones and do something good for regional brands and the environment at the same time.
Find the platform sturbock here
#MeToo Anti-Network
#MeToo Anti-Network is a platform that analyzes and looks more closely at the content of tweets under the hashtag #MeToo published on Twitter. The interactive website has an exciting graphic design and provides easy access to this important topic. The website was published on November 22nd, 2021, concerning the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women on November 25th.
Cosmologists say that most of the universe is structured by antimatter. We postulate that social media is similarly structured by effects of the unobserved discourse and experience. The backbone of a movement such as #MeToo is not based on the most-liked and most-retweeted, but by the masses of unobserved tweets. Vast numbers of #MeToo tweets that had no retweets and no likes nonetheless constituted acts of quiet testimony or unassuming solidarity. Conventional measures of network science thus fail to capture the true relevance of #MeToo. As Black feminist Patricia Hill Collins says, “Most activism is brought about by ordinary people like ourselves.”
From a random selection of one million #MeToo tweets, they read through all examples with more than 100 retweets. Only eight out of the 894 tweets are actual tweets about sexual assault or experiences around the topic of #MeToo. Of the rest, the vast majority are news media posts and political (trolling) discussions, most of them neglecting the specific issues and survivor voices at the heart of the MeToo movement.
From a distance, the graphics appear as abstract diagrams, similar to Bridget Riley’s work. Each line contains a powerful request for a reordering of power within society. They present an opportunity to engage with each request—from individual people at individual moments within a collective movement that is not over. #MeToo is urgent, #InvisibleNoMore is urgent, #BelieveBlackWomen is urgent, #MMIWG2S is urgent, #SayHerName is urgent. We are still living in a crisis of sexual violence. So you are invited to ditch the networked metrics and listen.
#MeToo Anti-Network is a project by Kim Albrecht with textual and conceptual support from Catherine D’Ignazio, Cole Martin, and Matthew Battles. Supported by metaLAB (at) Harvard, Schlesinger Library, and the Harvard Data Science Initiative.
Bauhaus Books
Today is a perfect day to discover exciting publications in our Slanted Shop! Especially the nine new books from Lars Müller Publishers’ Bauhaus series are definitely worth a look.
No. 3—A Bauhaus Experimental House
Adolf Meyer was Walter Gropius’s right-hand man, his planner and close confidant. As early as 1910, they jointly created the Fagus Factory, one of the most important modernist buildings. The experimental single-family home Haus am Horn was built for the first Bauhaus exhibition, in the summer of 1923 in Weimar. The house was planned by Georg Muche (design) and the architectural department at the Bauhaus. Adolf Meyer and Walter March were responsible for construction management. The book about the project was compiled in the summer of 1924 and became the third volume of the Bauhausbücher. Following an essay by Walter Gropius that supplies information on the Housing Industry, Georg Muche presents the design of the model building. Adolf Meyer then describes its technical execution, giving details on the companies involved.
ISBN: 978-3-03778-584-3
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No. 4—The Theater of the Bauhaus
Spatial dance, gestural dance, rod dance, Triadic Ballet: Oskar Schlemmer developed his costumed, masked dancer into an “art figure” synthesizing dance, masquerade, and music. The fourth volume of the Bauhausbücher presents the main characteristics of the Bauhaus concept of the stage. The Bauhaus stage is that of the Weimar period, essentially shaped by Oskar Schlemmer, who had taken over the stage department in 1923. László Moholy-Nagy, who was appointed to the Bauhaus the same year, took an interest in abstract kinetic and luminary phenomena which he examines in his essay Theatre, Circus, Variété. Farkas Molnár focused for his part on stage architecture, which he discusses in detail in this volume.
ISBN: 978-3-03778-584-3
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No. 6—Principles of Neo-Plastic Art
Theo van Doesburg was a jack of all trades: painter, writer, architect, typographer, and art theorist. In this volume of the Bauhausbücher, he attempts to make elementary concepts in the visual arts generally comprehensible. He was addressing the “modern artist” of his day, who had to deal with both shifting social paradigms and a changing understanding of art and art theory. Van Doesburg describes theory as a necessary consequence of creative practice. Artists, he says, “do not write about art but from within art.”
ISBN: 978-3-03778-584-3
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No. 7—New Works from the Bauhaus Workshops
The Bauhaus sought to unite life, craftsmanship, and art under one roof. In this volume, Walter Gropius provides a comprehensive overview of the Bauhaus workshops. He explains the basic principles guiding the teaching, describes contemporary developments in architecture, and illuminates the Bauhaus point of view on household utensils, which was geared toward finding the most suitable form for the respective object. Here, Gropius presents the Bauhaus workshops in Weimar devoted to furniture, metals, textiles, and ceramics, among other subjects.
ISBN: 978-3-03778-584-3
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No. 9—Point and Line to Plane
Point and Line to Plane, volume 9 of the Bauhausbücher series, can be seen as a continuation of Wassily Kandinsky’s seminal treatise On the Spiritual in Art. Kandinsky’s thesis is that different constellations of point, line and surface have different emotional effects on the viewer. Starting from the point (which represents the most concentrated and minimal graphic form), he understands all painterly forms as being a play of forces and counterforces: of contrasts.
ISBN: 978-3-03778-584-3
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No. 10—Dutch Architecture
“I am not an art historian but an architect: the future is more important to me than the past and I am more inclined to investigate what is to come than to research what had already occured.” Thus begins Oud’s “confession” in volume 10 of the Bauhausbücher series. His writing is a summary of theoretical and practical findings in the field of architecture, specifically using the example of Dutch architecture. He thus looks to the future and reflects on the potential of architecture without forgetting to reveal his relationship with the past.
ISBN: 978-3-03778-584-3
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No. 11—The Non-objective World
Kasimir Malevich’s treatise on Suprematism was included in the Bauhausbücher series in 1927, as was Piet Mondrian’s reflections on Russian Constructivism in 1925 (New Design, Bauhausbücher 5). Like Mondrian, who was never an official member of the Bauhaus, Malevich nevertheless has a close connection to the ideas of the school in terms of content. This volume, the eleventh, remains the only book publication in Germany to be produced during the life of the Russian avant-garde artist, and it laid the foundation for his late work: to wrest the mask of life from the true face of art.
ISBN: 978-3-03778-584-3
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No. 12—Bauhaus Buildings Dessau
In his third and last contribution within the Bauhausbücher series, the founder and long-standing director of the Bauhaus, Walter Gropius, gives a comprehensive overview of the Bauhaus in Dessau. In addition to a brief outline of the origins and development of the school, Gropius presents the architectural design of the new Bauhaus building and the associated Masters’ Houses with the help of photographic documentary evidence and planning sketches. In the book, he traces the technical planning development with extreme precision and provides an insight into the design practice of the “Bauhäusler.”
ISBN: 978-3-03778-584-3
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No. 13—Cubism
The French painter and writer Albert Gleizes is considered an important representative of Cubism and described himself as the founder of this art movement. Although he was never an official member of the Bauhaus, Gleizes nevertheless dedicated his influential essay on Cubism to the art school. In 1928, the editors László Moholy-Nagy and Walter Gropius included this essay as volume 13 in the Bauhaus book series. In addition to his own works, Albert Gleizes also shows artworks by Georges Braque, Robert Delaunay, Fernand Léger, and Pablo Picasso as reference examples and places the Bauhaus and its book series in an international context that impressively captures the interaction of the numerous art movements of the time.
ISBN: 978-3-03778-584-3
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Behind the Letters: Type By
Who are the designers behind the typefaces we see? What is the approach and attitude behind a label? Behind the Letters is a new format that will regularly introduce you to the creators behind the letters through an interview and give you an insight into their work. We are very excited to start right away with a—relatively new—label whose founders can also be described as pioneers in the development of small foundries selling a limited selection of quality types. Let us introduce Type By!
Type By, a type label and type boutique, was established in 2018 and launched in 2019, and is lead by Corina Cotorobai and Fred Smeijers. For those who are now wondering: yes, Corina and Fred were also the co-founders of the OurType foundry, a project they have withdrawn from in 2017. Their latest font-publishing label kept the basic idea of a “Small but Big” foundry, but grew to a next level: Type By offers author-based collections of fonts—by Smeijers himself, Thomas Thiemich, Hendrik Weber, Merel Wagner, Maurice Göldner, and Pierre Pané-Farré—that are, without a doubt, of a very high level of character, craftsmanship, quality, and intelligence.
Fred Smeijers is a stranger to very few in our trade: Dutch type designer, researcher, educator, and author. Well-known for his typefaces, such as Quadraat (1992, 2011) and Arnhem (2002) or his books, such as Counterpunch—Fred examines and reflects on the techniques of the sixteenth-century type production from our contemporary point of view. Thomas Thiemich is the type designer of the successful Fakt family and Head of Font Development at Type By. Thomas joined the new label with a complete and diverse collection of designs.
We are very pleased that both Fred and Thomas answered our questions:
What makes a good typeface?
Thomas The short answer would be: a coherent interplay of their sub-facets—not only one single aspect that makes a typeface truly good. Other factors, such as the idea, the precision of the final drawing, the relationship between the various glyph groups (such as capital letters, small letters, numbers, etc.), as well as the justification and kerning, determine the quality of a typeface. To me, the idea, spacing and kerning, have more impact on the value of a typeface than, say, a well-executed final drawing.
Fred Of course, next to that, market aspects such as trends and accessibility—distribution and, of course, pricing—can propel a good design to the ranks of a financially successful font, but that area is becoming increasingly blurred: if we look at the myriad of typefaces that are now on the market, some brilliant designs out there remain unexplainably undervalued, while others, frankly unremarkable, can and do conquer the market at fast pace.
When designing a new typeface which letters do you like to start with?
Thomas When the idea for a typeface is clear, the lowercase letter “n” is always the start, as it defines the proportions, stem width, and spaces that are most important for the further process. In most cases, I continue with “o” followed by “a.” In the next step “h, m, u / b, d, p, q, and i, j” follow next. With these glyphs one can write simple words and properly test the rhythm. I then design “f, t, r.” And, finally, I add all characters with diagonals: “k, v, w, y, z.” I tend to work on letter “s” between the other characters because I go back and forth again and again until I’m satisfied with its shape!
Fred and, “s” is a notoriously challenging glyph!
Designing text typefaces is maybe the most difficult exercise—how much character may a text typeface have? What are the difficulties?
Thomas In my opinion, expressivity is not what makes a typeface a text typeface. To me, suitability for text is rather defined by the glyphs’ proportions, counters, and overall space distribution. One can draw a typeface with fairly limited character and it will still not be suitable for text and, the other way around: it is possible to draw a typeface with a strong character that, despite all odds, will be suitable for longer text. Of course, the character of a typeface certainly influences its suitability for text, but it is not always the most decisive factor.
Fred Although the Type By collection is well known for its strong text typefaces, to me, all stylistic categories may present a creative challenge—type designs for text are not per se the most difficult exercise. Of course, each of these stylistic categories are challenging in their own, particular, way. How much character a text typeface might ideally have (or is perceived to have), is entirely up to both, the type designer and the type user. Let’s look at the text typefaces of Matthew Carter and the late Gerard Unger, for example.
Gerard is known for text typefaces that carry a very particular character—our eye does not need much training to recognize his typefaces. But they do function very well in text and share a beauty that can be defined almost as Calvinistic. There is no unnecessary fat, or better—detail.
Matthew designed Georgia, a design known to all of us. It’s easy on the eye and it allows effortless reading, without second thoughts. But also when used in big sizes it keeps it quaint character—we see nothing special and yet we are not really bored by it: a lot is happening in those outlines. These are also very important qualities. Now the most important question, which of these routes is better? Both, if you ask me.
Do you need a profound knowledge and understanding of culturehistorical contexts to create a good typeface
Thomas This is a question that might divide opinions. Traditionally-oriented typeface designers would certainly say that this is absolutely necessary. For my part, I see it a little more loosely: understanding these relationships and their history certainly helps when designing a typeface, but it is not 100% necessary. It even can lead you to a point where this knowledge blocks you from trying novel things. I recall the times—quite a long time, actually—I believed that only text typefaces were reputable type design and that display typefaces were only a side kick that should not be taken too seriously. My perspective has changed over time and a big part in that played the Pyte Foundry’s project by Ellmar Stefan. It opened my eyes. One year long Stefan released a new display typeface per week! At first, I didn’t take his project that seriously, but looking back I can surely say it encouraged me to experiment more. And, without these experiments, my typeface Gustella and Felka would not exist.
Fred A good question. Theoretically—No. But only in theory. If you wish to excel, it helps to be aware of the culture your typefaces are to be used in. We, in the West, are still somewhat arrogant about it and it’s true that we do our best not to be. But we still are.
What is so magic about the immersion in real objects?
Thomas The actual use of a typeface, a tool in which a lot of time and effort has been invested, is one of the main motivations for me to design typefaces at all. As a type designer, I see myself as a kind of toolmaker who makes these tools available to designers. When you see the typeface in use, it means that a designer has found my tool to be good enough to create something new and bigger. It is always a happy surprise when I stumble over portfolios, catalogs, or any other project that I do admire and also use one of my type designs. As someone who has a strong interest in architecture and industrial design, it was most gratifying for me to find out that (the architect) Tadao Ando used Fakt for one of the most important schools for art, design, and architecture of Latin America—Centro Roberto Garza Sada. The lettering on, as well as the navigation inside the building are designed in 3D letterforms of Fakt.
Fred In my studio you’ll see three big screens in one corner—that’s the digital part. Behind there is a table with a light box. And right next to that there is another world: anvils, vices, hammers, gauges, drills, machines, acid for etching, files, burins, chisels for wood and metal—punch-cutting stuff. There is also a small cylinder press and a corner for casting. I like doing things by hand, and I can only say to anyone—whether you’re a designer or not—don’t be afraid of it, it is enriching. Doing things with my hands gives me great pleasure and can also yield results you would never have got if you had stayed behind the screen, because these are truly different worlds.
You have a long history in designing custom typefaces for brands across the globe. Is the process of designing custom type different from retail fonts?
Fred Over the past twenty-five or so years, just as in general with graphic design, commissioned work, and the field of custom, proprietary fonts has clearly expanded. We see this evolution through various lenses: for example, budgets—that are getting tighter and tighter. Or briefs that may not be challenging or interesting enough. Then, also the opposite is happening: a number of clients go against the grain: they seek letter shapes that are of high quality but that is not all. They equally seek letters that result from another—not-mainstream—mentality. Such clients are not afraid to work with small teams, if you can show a proven expertise time after time—and that’s who we are. I love to solve problems and I love to roll my sleeves and deliver a meaningful, long lasting typographic solution. It is no secret that custom fonts is work within the constraints of a brief. There is nearly always a time-pressure factor, and this pressure requires us—me, Corina, Thomas, Hendrik, Pierre, Maurice, and everyone else—to offer the best we can—at that moment. In these circumstances the typefaces rarely, if at all, have the time to mature. So the result is always a “creative autopilot”: where our talent, the design vocabulary and style, and the experience we have built over the past thirty years, pretty much shape the result.
Our latest custom project—which was not publicly shown yet—had the most outstanding brief. One of the requirements (that made it particularly rare) was the client’s: “We want the best quality. Take as much time as you need.”
What’s the best piece of advice you received and repeated to others?
Thomas The first one: “As a designer, do not take yourself and your work too seriously.” Second: “If you get stuck in the creative process, allow yourself to take a break.” And the last: my favorite quote from Fred during my studies was always: “Being a 100% consequent probably ends up in shaking hands with the devil.”
Fred There are a couple of interesting things that Winston Churchill says in his small book Painting as a Pastime. One of them—and this thought became my life motto—“It’s no use doing what you like, you have to like what you do.”
Picture Credits
1. Felka Brick and Felka Leaf, by Thomas Thiemich.
2. Bery Script and Bery Tuscan, by Fred Smeijers.
3. Lirico, by Hendrik Weber.
4. Stan, by Maurice Göldner.
5. Klub, by Pierre Pané-Farré.
6. Gustella Solid and Gustella Stripes, by Thomas Thiemich.
7. & 8. Porsche Next custom fonts for Porsche AG. Design by Type Tailors: Hendrik Weber, Fred Smeijers, Corina Cotorobai, and Thomas Thiemich.
9. & 10. Brand Identity for IcA: Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston by Pentagram NY, Abbott Miller. Typefaces: Remo and Remo Stencil, by Thomas Thiemich.
11. & 12. Signage and Environmental graphics for Centro Roberto Garza Sada, Universidad de Monterrey by Pentagram NY, Abbott Miller. Typeface: Fakt, by Thomas Thiemich.
13. & 14. Book design “René Redzepi: A Journal” by Pentagram London, Astrid Stavro. Typefaces: Arnhem and Arnhem Fine, by Fred Smeijers.
15. & 16. Book design “Uptake” by Pentagram NY, Eddie Opara. Typeface: Fakt, by Thomas Thiemich.
17. Brand Identity for the Dutch National Opera and Ballet, by Lesley Moore, Amsterdam. Typefaces: Edward, by Hendrik Weber, Fakt, by Thomas Thiemich.