Walz-Stipendium 2020—Scholarship

In 2018, the Verein für die Schwarze Kunst Dresden e.V. announced a “Walz-Stipendium” (a typesetting scholarship) for the first time. The aim of the association is to preserve and promote the craftsmanship and traditional professions of typesetter and printer and to support the transfer of knowledge to future generations. The association is committed to providing young people in the relevant professions or during their studies with access to traditional printing workshops in order to achieve a deeper understanding of writing and typography through the practical use of the comprehensible, three-dimensional medium.

Now, under the slogan “Handsatz und Buchdruck wandernd lernen—Walz für Handsatz und Buchdruck 2020” (Learning handset and printing by traveling—letterpress and book printing 2020,) the association is awarding ten “Travels” for two months each in changing workshops. Of these, five are reserved as scholarships for participants under the age of 30, which the association supports with 1,000.– Euros each.

The association can provide typesetters and printers for teaching in schools where lead typesetting and printing presses are still available. Finally, it is also possible for the association to support students’ semester works or final theses with specialist knowledge, workplaces in the workshops of the association members or possibly financially.

With the scholarship, the Verein für die Schwarze Kunst Dresden e.V. enables friends of artistic trades to learn the basics of letterpress printing in up to 17 different workshops and to implement their own projects. The deadline for applications is October 10th, 2019. If a sufficient number of participants have not yet been selected, further applications will be accepted without a time limit.

Further information on the call and details on the participating workshops can be found here.

From 0 to 100!

From October 11th to October 20th, 2019, the Karlsruhe University of Arts and Design invites you to the “100 beste Plakate 18 Germany Austria Switzerland” exhibition, that each year rewards graphic designers from German-speaking countries for their posters. In 2018, the jury awarded the 100 most outstanding works amongst more than 2000 submissions from a total of 646 designers.

“From 0 to 100” is the motto not only of the exhibition but also of the off-program in the atriums of the HfG Karlsruhe. Award winners of the competition—among them some (former) students of the HfG Karlsruhe—have been invited to give lectures, lead two-day workshops and propose a new design of the HfG’s large exhibition wall. This off-program is intended to open up a dialogue on everyday creative practice in graphic and communication design in various contexts.

On the 11th and 12th of October, Karlsruhe will be hosting a small graphic design festival, during which the exhibition of the “100 Best Plakate” will be officially opened on Friday, October 11th, at 6 p.m. The exhibition can still be visited until October 20th, 2019.

When?
Opening: October 11th, 2019, 6 p.m.
Graphic design festival: October 11th until 12th, 2019
Exhibition: October 12th until 20th, 2019, 10 a.m. until 8 p.m.
Admission free

Where?
Staatliche Hochschule für Gestaltung Karlsruhe
Lorenzstraße 15
76135 Karlsruhe

Contact & registration here.

Femme Type

Femme Type  is an all-female publication conceptualised by ex UAL Chelsea graphic design communication student Amber Weaver aiming to celebrate over 40 skilled, international women exercising their talents in the type industry. Femme Type’s purpose is to create a valuable stage and platform for designers to showcase their brilliant typographic achievements wrapped up in a wonderful printed format. To create a valuable source of inspiration and education for future and established designers across the globe.

Femme Type is separated into three sections:

Essays
Featuring a series of Latin-Kanji pairing studies titled “Bilingual Lettering” by New York-based designer and type designer, Tienmin Liao. A discussion about typewriter typefaces and their Influence on new digital fonts by Alphabettes.org contributor & co-founder of Kinetic, María Ramos. And finally, an essay talking about alphabettes.org typographic headers by co-founder Amy Papaelias.

Type Design
This section is donated to showcasing typeface projects by the likes of Johanne Lian Oslen, Andrea Tinnes, Sibylle Hangmann, Pooja Saxena, Maria Doreuli, Mobel Type Foundry and more.

Typography
Featuring typographic projects by London-based studio Yarza Twins, Marta Gawin, Shanti Sparrow, Mynameiswendy, Marta Cerda, Rita Matos, and many moree.

We teamed up with Leeds-based creative printers and finishers Pressision Ltd to make this exciting project a reality. Published by People of Print (in perpetuum).

Femme Type

Publisher: People of Print (in perpetuum)
Designer & Author: Amber Weaver
Volume: 272 pages + 8-pages cover
Format: 25 × 21 cm
Workmanship: Litho printed CYMK plus a special Pantone Spot color onto high-quality Fedrigoni Arcoprint paper, PUR bound
Language: English
ISBN: 917-1-5272-4222-7
Price: 30.– €
Buy

Spring #16 – Sex

The Spring-collective presents the 16th issue of the Spring Magazine on the topic of sex. In the stories of this issue, the artists take up the challenge of illustrating something that is omnipresent as a subject and yet extremely private, intimate and unique for all of us. In the rooms of the Frappant, drawings, prints, paintings, and objects will be presented beyond the works of the magazine. On the opening evening every buyer of a magazine will take part in a raffle to win originals of the artists!

How do you illustrate something that is extremely private, intimate and unique for all of us? Sex is inherently inscribed in people’s minds—yet culturally one of life’s most heavily worked on topics. It connects and separates us, evokes the most intense emotions, creates identities and decides destinies. In sex, all aspects of existence merge in a variety of individual ways. Sex is an omnipresent subject, but still a great challenge for an illustration magazine.

In the current issue of SPRING, 14 women artists take up this challenge. In their comics, illustrations, and texts, they describe the evolutionary history of sexuality, allow us to participate in personal experiences from puberty, report on everyday sexism, ask what the absence of physicality actually does to us, and deal with female identity across generations. Entertainingly and openly, they stroll visually through the subject, telling us about digital vulvas, about the fusion in painting and about the Japanese festival of love.

SPRING was founded in Hamburg in 2004. Since then, a new anthology volume has been published every summer, which brings together the various works from the fields of comics, illustration and free drawing on a single theme. Since the beginning the group consists exclusively of women and has become a solid and important network for draughtswomen in Germany.

Spring #16 includes illustrations, comics and texts by Larissa Bertonasco, Aisha Franz, Doris Freigofas, Jul Gordon, Katharina Gschwendtner, Carolin Löbbert, marialuisa, moki, Nina Pagalies, Nadine Redlich, Katharina Serles, Katrin Stangl, Kati Szilagyi, Birgit Wehye and Stephanie Wunderlich.

Spring #16 – Sex

Publisher: mairisch Verlag
Release: September 2019
Format: 20 × 24 cm
Volume: 256 pages
Language: English, German
ISBN: 978-3-938539-54-5
Buy

When?
Opening:
Thursday, September 26th, 2019

Opening hours:
Friday, September 27th, 2019 from 5 until 7 p.m.
Saturday, September 28th, 2019 from 5 until 7 p.m.
Sunday, September 29th, 2019 from 2 until 5 p.m.

Participating artists:
Larissa Bertonasco
Aisha Franz
Doris Freigofas
Jul Gordon
Katharina Gschwendtner
Carolin Löbbert
marialuisa
moki
Nina Pagalies
Nadine Redlich
Catherine Serles
Katrin Stangl
Kati Szilagyi
Birgit Wehye
Stephanie Wunderlich

Where?
Frappant Galerie in der Viktoria-Kaserne
Zeisweg 9 (access via the backyard in Bodenstedtstraße)
22765 Hamburg

Further information on the event can be found here.

 

11th Weltformat Graphic Design Festival

This autumn, the 11th edition of Weltformat Graphic Design Festival takes place in Lucerne. This year’s festival theme is Tools & Rules. Nine exhibitions, a symposium with more than ten international speakers as well as talks, guided tours, film screenings, and much more will give visitors an insight into the topic.

In addition to current trends, socio-economic tendencies and personal preferences, the tools graphic artists choose to work with ultimately shape their designs. Technical innovations are a driving force behind graphic design and have a significant influence on the form and function of visual solutions. This year’s festival edition examines the wide range of traditional and contemporary tools used today.

The exhibition Designing Tools for example explores the question of whether unique graphic solutions and an unmistakable visual language call for self-developed tools tailored to the individual needs of designers. The exhibition focuses on the tools used by graphic designers—from modified technical devices to strict sets of rules and complex algorithms.

Today, easy-to-use poster, layout or logo generators offer fast and inexpensive graphic solutions to the general public. In addition, new technologies such as machine learning, artificial intelligence and crowdsourcing are used to further optimise the market-dominating design programmes. Although there are many advantages to these developments, the question arises as to how standardised and generic design solutions can be avoided. Designing Tools highlights how the tools used by graphic designers significantly influence their design. For the exhibited projects, no conventional design instruments were used, but existing tools were converted, modified and misused. Some instruments were developed especially for the realisation of certain projects—in close connection with the content. These instruments range from technical devices and digital programmes to predefined rules and regulations. The use of these individual and new tools leads to surprising visual results beyond generic or decorative design.

On the other hand, the exhibition Pre-digital is dedicated to the era before the computer became designers’ most used device, presents original designs by graphic artists such as Werner Jeker, Bruno Monguzzi, Ralph Schraivogel or Niklaus Troxler and offers an insight into the world of analog working tools. A small grey box from the Californian Palo Alto stands for probably the most radical change in the history of graphic design. In 1984, the age of desktop publishing was heralded with the introduction of Apple Macintosh. Initially still modest in quality and smiled at by many, it didn’t take long for the new digital design process to establish itself across the industry. After a few years, drawing tables, gluing utensils or Letraset letters looked like relics from the past. Processes established over many decades were suddenly completely obsolete. The digitalisation that is still feared by many industries today—it took over the field of graphic design more than three decades ago.

At the Weltformat Graphic Design Festival symposium, designers from all over the world will examine the topic of Tools & Rules in three thematic blocks: Using and Misusing Tools, Type and Techniques and Professional (R)evolutions. They will also present their own work in relation to the topics discussed. The panel Type and Techniques highlights the relationship between type design and technology whereas Using and Misusing Tools examines the potential of specifically developed design tools and concepts. The job profile and professional environment of designers is constantly evolving. Technical innovations, design standards and socio-economic progresses have shaped the profession of graphic artists since the end of the 19th century. The thematic block Professional (R)evolutions discusses these developments with a focus on the current challenges in the context of digitalisation and new technologies.

For this year’s festival poster of Weltformat Graphic Design Festival, the design studio Maximage has developed a digital tool; the Weltformat app with an integrated AR feature complements the festival poster designed by Maximage and turns the entire public space into a projection surface for typography.

Slanted is giving away 2 × 2 tickets for the Weltformat Graphic Design Festival including the symposium. To take part in the lottery, please send an email with the subject “Weltformat” to [email protected] until September 26th, 2019, 11 a.m. The winners will be drawn. Legal ways are excluded. By taking part you are accepting the privacy statement of Slanted. Good Luck.

When?
Festival:
Daily Exhibitions from September 28th, until October 6th, 2019
Symposium:
September 28th, 2019

Where?
Lucerne, Switzerland

More information here.

Tÿpo St. Gallen 2019

It is not easy to keep your balance in the turbulence of everyday work life. The fifth new edition of Tÿpo St. Gallen is dedicated to this topic in all its forms and facets—the industry meeting place for designers, which enjoys the highest reputation far beyond the borders of Eastern Switzerland. The three-day typography symposium is organized by Schule für Gestaltung St. Gallen and will take place from November 8th until 10th, 2019.

This year’s Tÿpo St. Gallen will focus on the topic of balance. What is a good balance anyway? How can it be achieved? Simple recipes, rigid rules or truisms usually prove useless. What proves itself in the stream of all those processes that thwart everyday life, projects, ideas and plans? These are the questions Tÿpo St. Gallen asks its speakers.

Among the 12 expert speakers from Switzerland, Germany, Austria and the Netherlands, visitors can look forward to the following names:

Andreas Uebele studied architecture and urban planning at the University of Stuttgart and free graphic design at the Kunstakademie Stuttgart. In 1996 he founded his own office for visual communication in Stuttgart, which he has been running together with Carolin Himmel since 2016. Büro Uebele works in all areas of visual communication, focusing on visual identity, information and orientation systems, corporate communication and web design.

Hans and Sabine Bockting live and work as freelance design consultants and graphic designers in Amsterdam. Sabine Bockting Reinhardt studied visual communication at the Bielefeld University of Applied Sciences. After working for agencies in Germany and the Netherlands, she ran the Bockting Ontwerpers office in Amsterdam together with Hans Bockting from 2007 to 2017. Hans Bockting studied at the Academie voor kunst en industrie (aki) in Enschede and then worked until 1970 as Art Director and co-founder in various agencies in The Hague and Amsterdam.

Anika Kunst and Lilo Schäfer talk about the transition from studies to the reality of design life. It will be a testimonial from the point of view of two ambitious and motivated designers who deal with the questions of life: How do I want to live? How can I work? When do I have a family? Anika Kunst studied communication design in Düsseldorf. She deals with visual text images, concrete poetry and typographic experiments. Lilo Schäfer studied communication design in Düsseldorf and did research on design history. She is currently working on the structuring and digitalisation of archives and on character recognition using artificial neural networks.

Tickets and registration
Professionals: 398.– CHF
Students: 199.– CHF
The price includes aperitif on Friday, lunch on Saturday and all refreshments during the breaks.

When?
November 8th until 10th, 2019

Where?
Gewerbliches Berufs- und Weiterbildungszentrum St. Gallen 
Schule für Gestaltung
Demutstrasse 115 
9012 St. Gallen
Schwitzerland

Monopol-Online Relaunch

Immediately when accessing the home page the Monopol logo stretches high up, becomes indecipherable and energetically throws the visitor onto the overview of the website. It is the calculated use of movement—one moment surprisingly absurd, the next more subtly applied—that is used throughout the design as a leitmotif. It creates various rhythms and playfully draws the visitors’ attention towards the respective elements, such as the newsletter button. The accordion-effect that is specially designed for the overview highlights each image of the articles and allows a smooth navigation through the content.

The graphic design is characterized by the use of basic geometric shapes, a clear and simple structure, as well as the generous use of white space.

Pop meets formal stringency—that is how Matthias Last and his Berlin-based design practice Studio Last put their initial idea for the website’s redesign into words. Their aim was to create a news portal that brings together aesthetic playfulness with the objective approach of journalism.

Typeface: Ginto by DINAMO
Design + Art Direction: Studio Last
FB: facebook.com/studiolast.berlin
IG: studio.last

 

Druck und Design

Perfect print products are always the result of a skilful interaction between creative minds, printers and customers. The independent conference “Druck und Design” will take place on October 22nd, 2019 in the beautiful conference wing of the Literaturhaus Munich. Against the backdrop of the Theatinerkirche, printers, clients and designers will be able to talk to each other and benefit from practice-oriented work panels that focus on knowledge transfer. Inspiring keynote speeches set the guard rail and show where the print industry is heading. You can also expect paper innovations, high-quality print finishes and amazing print projects in our renowned exhibition area.

Tickets cost 159.– € and are available here.

When?
Oktober 22nd, 2019
9:30 a.m. until 5:30 p.m.

Where?
Literaturhaus München
Salvatorplatz 1
80333 Munich

A Little Daily Dose

Learning a new language at one’s leisure is never easy, A Little Daily Dose is designed to spark interest in the Chinese language and accompany the reader during the transition between the first step and taking it further. Through four bilingual short stories, readers are encouraged to read English stories and pick up color-coded Chinese characters—a little at a time—with the support of an online vocabulary handbook.

By learning the character for Fish (鱼), for example, readers will learn that Eel (鳗), Whale (鲸), Cuttlefish (鱿) and Shark (鲨) possess the Fish component and most characters bearing the same trait are associated with, or derived from, Fish. The creators share how 鱼 (yú) Fish has the same pronunciation as 余 (yú) Abundance and during Chinese New Year dinner gatherings, having fish is a must to start the year with abundance.

Linz is a Chinese Singaporean designer who is currently based in San Francisco. A Little Daily Dose began as a personal project to aid her husband, Jon, in learning Chinese. Over the last two years, they have been sharing and improving it with other people who are learning Chinese. This might not be the most conventional way to learn Chinese but for those who are not ready to take direct immersion trips to China, or to sign up for classes with local institutions, or even think it’s a mission impossible, this might just be the perfect summer read.

This documentation of their Chinese learning adventure is a platinum winner of Hermes Creative Awards 2019.

A Little Daily Dose

Authors / Designers: Linz Lim & Jon Robson
Language: English & Chinese
Pages: 256
Format: 12.5cm (Width) × 18cm (Height)
Production: 4C print with open spine binding
Release date: 2019
ISBN: 978-981-14-0348-4
Price: 28.80 US$ (26.06 €)
Buy

Typotable №3

Here we go again with Typotable №3. Under the motto Generate meets Corporate the TypeMates Nils Thomsen, Lisa Fischbach and Jakob Runge will show us two of their Custom Font Projects. Elias Hanzer, a graphic and type designer from Berlin, will give us insights in his typeface designs, which often transform into images instead of text.

Typotable is an independent lecture series, where current type design and typography positions are shown and discussed. The lectures will be held by established type and graphic designers as well as by young designers and students.

Typotable is initiated by four type lovers from Leipzig in cooperation with the Gesellschaft zur Förderung der Druckkunst Leipzig e.V.. It takes place quarterly in the Large Printing Hall of the Museum für Druckkunst.

Typotable №3

When?
26th of September 2019

Doors: 6.30 p.m.
Start: 7 p.m.
End: 9 p.m.

Afterwards get together in a bar in the west of Leipzig.

Where?
Großer Drucksaal im Museum für Druckkunst
Nonnenstraße 38
04229 Leipzig

Tickets: 9 € via tixforgigs

GIF me your best

The Fall of the Berlin Wall: November 9th, 2019 we’ll celebrate the 30th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, that divided Berlin for 28 years. This was made possible by the peaceful revolution of courageous people in the GDR who took to the streets to demonstrate for their freedom. When the wall fell, anything seemed possible. Wunderbar!

Today, 30 years later, we find ourselves in a situation that we thought we had already overcome. Political leaders and populists want to convince us that the Wall is an effective political tool to master our global challenges. But as the philosopher Noam Chomsky already says: walls that separate people from one another are the architecture of violence. Tell Stories with GIFs! The GIF ME YOUR BEST #ZEROWALLS GIF Competition 2019 aims to collect the best animated GIF stories that show how to tear down walls. The visible ones that separate us from other people, the invisible ones that keep us away from important information, and the self-made ones in our heads that block our clear view of life. Invited are international graphic and animation designers, typographers, illustrators, photographers and artists. Participation is worth it! Out of all entries an international jury will award 5 GIFs. Each of the 5 winners will receive a high-quality collection of 9 books about Berlin, the Berlin Wall, the development of cities, and cross-border communication tools.

The jury consists of Markus Beeko (Secretary General of the German section of Amnesty International, Berlin), Tim O’Brien (Illustrator, New York, United States), Melinda Beck (Illustrator, Animator, and Graphic Designer, New York, United States), Benito Cabañas Aguilera (Graphic Designer, Puebla, Mexico)and Lahav Halevy (Graphic Designer, Tel Aviv, Israel.)

Participants may submit up to five GIFs.
The closing date for entries is November 4th, 2019.
The full terms and conditions can be found here.

The Templates

THE TEMPLATES is a collection of customisable imagery created to showcase artwork in a realistic environment. The project is a close and ongoing collaboration between Maurice Másson and The Brand Identity. Maurice Másson is a German art director operating across mediums within Art and Industry. The Brand Identity is a resource for the creativity community, sharing contemporary design works online, this time also being involved in creation and distribution. The collaboration was born out of a shared desire to offer a new take on photographic mockups that feel both curated and like on-the-fly photography that just happen to contain a poster frame or shop sign.

The first drop consists of 20 templates and includes billboards, posters and signs, and are available individually, in a package by type, or as a complete collection. The collaboration will continue to grow, with future additions set to include flags, shop windows and stationery.

Further information at the The Brand Identity shop.

Typeface used: FK Screamer by Florian Karsten

Augmented Conspiracy

50 years ago, on July 20th, 1969, the first humans set foot on the moon—was it all fake? Since then, numerous conspiracy theories have accompanied the mission of Apollo 11. The bachelor project Augmented Conspiracy by Stella Friedenberger uses Augmented Reality to show a reversible figure between original and counterfeit and plays with possibilities of manipulation.

In 1976 the previously unsuccessful author Bill Kaysing published his book We Never Went to the Moon: America’s Thirty Billion Dollar Swindle and thus founded the conspiracy theory about the Apollo moon landings. In former times supporters of alternative facts rather stayed among their own kind but since the 1990s they are forming global networks on the internet.

During the past decades an entirely new infrastructure of perception, communication and coordination emerged. Our life increasingly translocates into the digital. We are frequently watching the world surrounding us through smartphones, tablets and other technical devices; one could almost say we are continuously developing a new sense—some kind of daily extension of our awareness. What effects does digitization have on the organization of our lives but also on social realities as well as the shaping of public opinion? How do perceptual habits change in times of the Internet of Things and which challenges come along with it?

When we say “There it is in black and white!” than it is not only about printer’s ink but principally about the plausibility of a classical printed medium like a book. When something is literally printed “in black and white” we have a naturally tendency to rely on it. But when it happens that a digital image is displayed into our analogue environment it triggers the very reverse. Just imagine it would be exactly the opposite—when the digital layer would supplement reality or would even have the potential to provide more truth than the analogue reality. In Augmented Reality the analogue and the digital world go hand in hand and this picture is not only an interdisciplinary niche but most of all it is a romantic vision within an current spirit of time. How much technology can reality bear? How much reality can technology bear? Is there some kind of balance between digital and analogue? Perhaps the digital future will not immediately replace the analogue past but what if, for now, it takes it on a journey? Yesterday and tomorrow are one.

This Augmented-Reality-book-installation emerged as a bachelor project in Communication Design/Editorial Design at Burg Giebichenstein University of Art and Design Halle and just got nominated for Giebichenstein Design Award in the category “Best Communication.” As an installation it was primary seen in exhibitions but could also be issued in libraries and book stores. An intended release would require a mobile app version, to be able to experience the interaction between analogue and digital also at home through your smartphone or tablet.

Augmented Conspiracy

Design: Stella Friedenberger
Publikation:
Volume: 164 Pages
Format: 17,5 × 24,5 cm
Language: English
Printing: HPIndigo
Binding: Thread Stitching, Swiss Brochure
Finishing: Blackened back of book block, black edge
Installation:
Setup: Monitor, Webcam with pivot arm, table with plotted grid
AR-Software: Unity, Vuforia

 

Arlonne Sans Pro

Arlonne Sans Pro is a humanistic sans-serif font family, with neoclassical influences and eight weights.

The font was designed between 2015 and 2019 by Sacha Rein with the intent to create a font with a simple appearance yet infused with a lot of character. Inspired by the works of Bigelow & Holmes and Adrian Frutiger, readability was always one of the main concerns. The font is ideal for longer typesetting and multilingual publications, such as magazines, annual reports, brochures and books. The carefully designed characters are equally suited for titles or logos.

Over 1.800 characters cover more than 143 languages (Latin Extended, Greek, and Cyrillic). The font contains small caps, mathematical symbols, automatic fractions, ligatures, stylistic variants and many more OpenType features. Spacing and kerning were created in collaboration with Igino Marini’s iKern service.

The name Arlonne derives from the small town of Arlon, a Walloon municipality of Belgium and capital of the province of Luxembourg.

Arlonne Sans Pro

Type foundry & Designer: Sacha Rein
Publishing date: June 2019
Weights: Light, Light Italic, Regular, Regular Italic, Bold, Bold Italic, Black, Black Italic
Format: Desktop, Web, App
Price Individual style: 44.– Euro
Price Complete family: 185.– Euro
Buy at MyFonts
Buy at YouWorkForThem

FYI: Conference for Information Design

No longer just an initialism for nerds or workaholics, “FYI:” is also a conference for information design, taking place for the second time on November 9th, 2019.

Around 200 participants are expected to attend the FYI conference. This time around the event will take place in the Ankerhalle of the Vienna Brotfabrik, following the concept that unusual places promote creativity. Visitors await a mix of specialist lectures and short impulses, an experience area for browsing and activities, and a creatively crazy conference organisation. Lectures are held by 9 professionals and 5 recent graduates. Participate, talk to each other, educate yourself, broaden your horizon—all this is is waiting for those who are, or want to become, information designers.

Tickets for 95.– € regularly, Student tickets for 45.– € (bring your ID card with you.)

When?
November 9th, 2019
from 12 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.

Where?
Ankersaal der Brotfabrik
Absberggasse 27
1100 Wien

Bauhaus 4.0 meets Design Thinking & User-Centered Design

Bauhaus 4.0 meets Design Thinking & User-Centered Design: Holistic, interdisciplinary, iterative, empathetic. What can we learn from the Bauhaus? How can Design Thinking and User Centered Design help to solve today’s challenges? How can German design regain international recognition and make an impact as a relevant part of “Made in Germany?” Isn’t the German longing for ethics and morality helpful here? To what extent can design help to balance social and economic requirements? And isn’t good design user-centered anyway?

At the panel discussion on September 17th, 2019 in Berlin we will discuss the role and potential of design as a strategy and method in times of digitalisation in a pointed and provocative way. Among others with Lutz Engelke, Ralph Habich and UlrichWeinberg—as well as Helmut Ness as Special Guest. The moderation will be led by Boris Kochan and Ulrich Müller, the greeting will be given by Victoria Ringleb, Managing Director of AGD. The host is the AGD (Alliance of German Designers.)

Tickets cost 8.– € and are available here.

When?
Tuesday, September 17th, 2019
6:30 p.m.

Where?
In the paperwarehouse of the E. Michaelis & Co. GmbH & Co. KG
Tabbertstraße 18
12459 Berlin

 

PULP – Patrick Thomas

PULP is the title of a new body of work made by Patrick Thomas in response to the reality of living in an age of “truth decay.” Interacting with randomly sourced daily newsprint—the traditionally respected source of factual information—he layers found, drawn and codegenerated graphic forms in an aleatory way utilising the mechanical process of silkscreen printing. Intentionally ambiguous, the resulting prints may be appreciated for their abstract beauty and as a celebration of the disappearing broadsheet newspaper format; however, they might also conceal a darker significance that suggests manipulation, concealment and censorship. They are powerful graphic statements that document a moment in time whose aim is to ask more questions than provide answers, which, due to the unstable physical properties of the newsprint material, will continue to silently evolve over the years. Patrick Thomas (Liverpool, GB) is a graphic artist, who lives and works in Berlin and is a professor at Staatliche Akademie der Bildenden Künste Stuttgart.

Graphics as a political form of expression

“In light of the rise of both social media and right-wing populist movements, not only in Europe, the difference between truth and opinion seems to have become the object of negotiation in widespread political discussion. Underming facts in the name of political interest, raises not only the question of the appropriateness of political reactions but also the viability of the chosen media for political interventions. One of Patrick Thomas’ strengths is not only how he disintegrates the functional logic of graphic design in order to operate on the border between graphic art and social design. But rather how, in a politically precarious climate, the irreducible aesthetic forms expressed in his work pose the question of the role and function of graphic design within political negotiation itself.
In their layering of different graphic forms, his work not only plays with the semantics of surface and subsurface (for example, a version of his work ‘Empire,’ shows the barcode of Trump’s book ‘How to Get Rich’ printed on a title page of the FAZ, which could be read as a motif of capital logic within the political process, in tension, but also in continuity with, the agenda of this newspaper). Rather, this interplay is irreducibly tied to an aesthetic of surface and subsurface. The viewer’s gaze oscillates between an appreciation of the graphic form (which becomes an abysmal reminder of the practices of censorship) and the material of the newspaper. What is at stake always seems to exist in the perspective that the object offers us, which is not the one we are currently taking in. The aim of the exhibited works is not to develop concrete media formats and practices that steer political decision-making processes in a productive direction. But rather, as aesthetic objects and works of graphic art, they offer a medium of reflection and thus an education for the viewer.”
(Daniel Martin Feige, Professor of Philosophy and Aesthetics in the design department of the Staatliche Akademie der Bildenden Künste Stuttgart)

A———Z is a new space in Berlin with the mission of expanding the territory of graphic design by rethinking its limits and challenging traditional perceptions. At the storefront space, located in the heart of the city, renowned graphic designers will be invited to unfold their artistic, conceptual or formally experimental projects.

Where?
Torstraße 93
10119 Berlin

When?
Opening: Thursday, September 12th, 2019, 7 p.m.
Opening times:
During Berlin Art Week: September 13th to September 15th, 2019, 1 p.m.–7 p.m.
After September 16th to November 8th, 2019, Fridays 1 p.m.–7 p.m. and by appointment

Pulic talk by Patrick Thomas:
Thursday, October 10th, 2019, 7 p.m.

Druckerwochenenden

The Speyerer Winkeldruckerey is dedicated to experimental typography and artistic hand pressure. Graphic works are created at the printer weekends held once a month in the winter months, to which graphic designers and hand press printers with national and international reputations are invited. In the “open workshops,” visitors can study the guest printers work on Saturday and Sunday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. In the gallery Typographisches Kabinett, works by the present artists are shown for four weeks each.

When?
28–29/09/2019
Philipp Hennevogl

26–27/10/2019
Hannes Steinert

23–24/11/2019
Niklaus Troxler

18–19/01/2020
Anastasiya Nesterova

15–16/02/2020
Thomas Siemon

14–15/03/2020
Pierre Pané-Farré

Opening Hours
Tuesdays 1 p.m. to 4 p.m.
as well as during the printer weekends
Saturdays and Sundays 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
admission free

Wo?
Winkeldruckerey and Typographisches Kabinett
Im Kulturhof Flachsgasse
Flachsgasse 3
67346 Speyer
Germany
Telephone +49 6232 142250
#winkeldruckerey

Get more information here.

K. H. Drescher—Berlin Typo Posters, Texts, and Interviews

Please help us to publish this comprehensive publication about the typographic work and life of the designer of the Berliner Ensemble Karl-Heinz Drescher (1937–2011)! The book is now available for preorder on kickstarter.

While researching in the university archive of Burg Giebichenstein (Halle, Saale, DE) for his master studies, the designer Markus Lange came across the fantastic typographic poster artwork of Karl-Heinz Drescher (* October 7, 1936 in Quirl; † May 19, 2011 in Berlin), a graphic artist, who studied from 1955 to 1960 in the former GDR at the same school (formerly known as Hochschule für industrielle Formgestaltung). In the 100-year history of the university Drescher’s name was rather unknown and nobody knew anything about him. In a 1-year research Markus Lange got in touch with Drescher’s family, and conducted various interviews with companions and friends to get to know more about this talented designer.

Lange found out, that Drescher joined the Berliner Ensemble in 1962, the theater founded by Berthold Brecht for which he worked as a graphic designer for almost 40 years under the direction of Brecht’s wife Helene Weigel. In addition to his work at this house, Drescher also worked for other organizers, museums, galleries, and theaters, amongst others the Akademie der Künste der DDR, the Maxim-Gorki-Theater, and the Deutsche Staatsoper in Berlin. His catalog of works today comprises over 400 posters, about one third printed with letterpress.

For the first time, this book summarizes most of Drescher’s (typographic) posters in one comprehensive volume. The book contains texts and interviews by various authors such as Dr. Friedrich Diekmann, Dr. Sylke Wunderlich, Helmut Brade, Niklaus Troxler, Gerd Fleischmann, Jamie Murphy, Erik Spiekermann, Ferdinand Ulrich, Götz Gramlich, Peter Kammerer, Vera Tenschert, Cesarina and Alessandro Drescher.

This publication serves as a review of the life of an extraordinary theater graphic designer but also as an inspiration for the here and now. Please help us reach the goal, to sum up the amazing work of an outstanding designer. Pledges start from €5.– and include many exclusive rewards like early bird discounts, original posters, mention in the book, …

Published by: Slanted Publishers and Markus Lange
Concept and Design: Markus Lange
Release: February 2020
Format: 195 × 265 mm
Volume: 272 pages
Language: German + English
Printing: Offset
Edition: 1,000
ISBN: 978-3-948440-00-8

Preorder your copy on Kickstarter!

Typeface of the Month: Monterchi

Monterchi is an ode to the typefaces of the early Renaissance and their detailed ornaments, ligatures, and constructed geometric beauty. With Monterchi, the Zetafons designers have succeeded in creating a true working typeface that can be used in any design environment of modern life and yet still lives up to its historical origins.

In 1459, while visiting his dying mother, Italian painter Piero della Francesca spent seven days creating a fresco of a pregnant Madonna in a small country church in the hilltown of Monterchi located near Arezzo, in Italy. Hailed today as one of the masterpieces of Italian Renaissance, the fresco was given a new branding in 2019 by Italian art director Riccardo Falcinelli who asked the Zetafonts team to develop a custom font for the project.

Cosimo Lorenzo Pancini, lead designer for the project, decided to start from the extensive research work made in 2016 by Francesco Canovaro for his Beatrix Antiqua and Florentia typefaces—based on the same inscriptions in Basilica di Santa Croce in Florence that had inspired Hermann Zapf’s Optima typeface. These classical uppercase letterforms, with their striking geometric proportions and flared serifs, are the same used by Piero della Francesca itself in some of his hand-painted autograph inscriptions—where one can also notice the ligature forms that were created by middle age stone carvers as a way to keep a consistent balance for each line while carving more letters in a given space. Over one hundred of these ligature letterforms where researched and added to the typeface with the help of Andrea Tartarelli and Maria Chiara Fantini, who also helped develop the lower case alphabet, inspired by the early humanist minuscules like the Littera Antiqua as reimagined by humanist punch cutters like Jenson and Griffo.

The resulting typeface system is a 50-weights ode to the beauty of classical roman letterforms and their renaissance re-discovery, pairing elegant alternate forms and quirky uppercase ligatures with an array of design features for clear and effective editorial, signage, logo and wayfinding design. The base display family Monterchi allows endless design expressions with a range of six weights from the slender thin to the strong Extrabold, all with matching Italics and an array of over one hundred discretionary ligatures. A fine-tuned Monterchi Text version—with a larger x-height and wider spacing—has been developed to remain clear and legible even at small sizes in use as a body text font. The use range of the family is enriched by Monterchi Serif and Monterchi Sans that feature different contemporary interpretations of the same classical geometric skeleton, allowing for layered editorial design and variation in use. While the first offers an alternative to classical humanist serifs, the second family gives a twist of modernity to the family, reducing contrast and embracing modern geometric sans proportions.

All the fifty fonts in the Monterchi Type System feature an extended character set of over 1,100 glyphs covering over 200 languages using the Latin alphabet, as well as Greek and Russian Cyrillic. OpenType features include small caps, positional figures, alternate letterforms, stylistic sets and over a hundred discretionary uppercase ligatures.

With his elegant, historical aesthetic, Monterchi embodies the spirit of early Renaissance and the humanist obsession with constructed and geometric beauty—still managing to function as a workhorse family, ready to help any designer in need of a timeless classic look, or looking for the right ligature to transform a simple word into a striking wordmark.

Monterchi

Foundry: Zetafonts
Designer: Cosimo Lorenzo Pancini with Francesco Canovaro, Andrea Tartarelli, and Maria Chiara Fantini
Release: 2019
Format: Desktop, Web, App
Weights: Four families—Display, Text, Sans, and Serif:
Monterchi Display: Thin, Thin Italic, Light, Light Italic,  Book, Book Italic, Regular, Italic,Bold, Bold Italic, ExtraBold, ExtraBold Italic
Monterchi Text: Thin, Thin Italic, Light, Light Italic,  Book, Book Italic, Regular, Italic,Bold, Bold Italic, ExtraBold, ExtraBold Italic
Monterchi Sans: Thin, Thin Italic, Light, Light Italic,  Book, Book Italic, Regular, Italic,Bold, Bold Italic, ExtraBold, ExtraBold Italic, Heavy, Heavy Italic
Monterchi Serif: Thin, Thin Italic, Light, Light Italic,  Book, Book Italic, Regular, Italic,Bold, Bold Italic, ExtraBold, ExtraBold Italic
Price: Single weights from 25.– € (some weights free), full family (50 styles) from 181.– €

The International Biennal Poster Design Terras Gauda

The International Biennial Poster Design Terras Gauda—Francisco Mantecón Competition is celebrating its 14th edition this year with 16,000 € prizes. More than 17,000 posters from 96 countries have participated in the 13 previous editions since 2002 in the private sponsored competition. Works can be submitted at any time before the September 30th, 2019 deadline.

Geographic diversity is also reflected in its awards: previous winners were artists and studios in Japan, the United States, Germany, Belgium, Portugal, Poland or Spain. Terras Gauda Wineries will award 16,000 € to the winners, with 10,000 € going to the 1st prize, 2,000 € to the 1st Runner-up, 2nd Runner-up and Honorable Mention, respectively.  The panel of judges includes internationally acclaimed designer Javier Jaen, winner of the Laus Award and author of works for The New York Times, The Washington Post or National Geographic; and Diego Areso, Art Director of El País and El País Semanal. Along with them, Portuguese National Design Prize winner Miguel Palmeiro will attend on behalf of the studio United By, the winner of the latest edition of the competition. José María Fonseca, Chairman of the Terras Gauda Group, will preside over the panel of judges, accompanied by CEO Enrique Costas; Enrique López Veiga, President of the Vigo Port Authority; Nava Castro, director of the Galician Tourism Board; Pilar Barreiro, philologist and widow of Francisco Mantecón, and Paulino Novo, who will serve as secretary.

Galician Tourism Board Competition

The Galician Tourism Board is reinforcing its partnership with the International Biennial Poster Design Terras Gauda through the creation of a closed binding competition in which only the finalists and award winners of this 14th edition will participate. The works selected in the Galician Tourism Board Competition, eligible for 10,000 € in prize money, will be the promotional image of the “9th and 10th Galician Wine Routes Open Door Sessions.” The International Biennial Terras Gauda—Francisco Mantecón Advertising Poster Competition is supported by the Vigo Port Authority, as well as the Department of Culture and Tourism through the Galician Tourism Agency.

Works can be submitted any time before September 30th, 2019.
More information here.

ADC Design Experience

On November 13th 2019, the ADC Design Experience will be back for another round of inspiring talks and workshops at Neues Schloss Stuttgart. Like it was one year ago (we were there,) the Art Directors Club has once again engaged some of the best international and local heads of the creative industry as speakers. David Carson (legend of typography), Cécile Dormeau (illustrator & instagrammer), Bruno Maag (Swiss typeface designer & founder of the famous Dalton Maag Studio), Andreas Uebele (expert in visual communication and graphic design) and lots of other top creatives as well as industry leaders will share exclusive insights to the following key questions of the conference:

What does the future of design look like? What impact has social media on design? Will design trends rather be shaped by social media platforms, such as Instagram? Or by leading industries?

„INSTA VS. INDUSTRY“ will be the common thread running through the talks, workshops and networking opportunities of the ADC Design Experience. Tickets are now on sale, with special discounts for students.

When?
At the 13th November 2019 at 11 a.m.

Where?
Neues Schloss Stuttgart,
Schloßpl. 4,
70173 Stuttgart

adc.de

The Franfurt Art Experience

THE FRANKFURT ART EXPERIENCE celebrates its premiere and the 25th start of the season of the Frankfurt Galleries from the 6th to the 8th of September 2019 as a unique four-day art experience. 50 galleries and art venues are open throughout the city and in the heart of the city, the Frankfurt Art Experience Center offers information, a café and a relaxed atmosphere. The art fair paper positions comes to Frankfurt for the first time and shows outstanding artistic positions on the subject of drawing and the medium of paper. “The Art Experience Talks” highlights the latest developments in the industry, and “The Art Experience Walks” provides a unique insight into the local heterogeneous art scene in the city. Information and accreditation:

 

THE FRANKFURT ART EXPERIENCE

When?
6th to 8th of September 2019

Where?
Throughout the whole city of Frankfurt. The heart of the weekend will beat at the Flare of Frankfurt, Großen Eschenheimerstraße 16 (Stadtmitte.)
For an easy orientation to the Galleries, Off-Spaces and Art-institutions we recommend to use the interactive map.

Further information to the event and accreditation here.

Interview with Noa Snir

In this series we introduce you to the most exciting Israeli creative minds in graphic design, animation and illustration. Last time we introduced the illustrator Ofra Amit. More will follow. But now Noa Snir.

Noa Snir deals with newspaper illustrations, book illustrations, commercial commissions and personal projects. She is an illustrator, printmaker and, according to her website, a bookworm. Noa Snir has worked worldwide for magazines and newspapers such as The New York Times, Granta Magazine and the children’s magazine Anorak Magazine. Her work has been exhibited in Israel, many European countries and the USA. Born and raised in Jerusalem, she graduated in 2012 with a bachelor’s degree in Visual Communication from the Bezalel Academy of Arts & Design in Jerusalem, lived in Tel Aviv and moved to Berlin to earn a master’s degree in illustration from the Universität der Künste, graduating in 2016. Her first children’s book, an illustrated biography of the American writer Maya Angelou, will be published in the UK in September.

You said that you discovered illustration while working in a book shop. Do you find some of that atmosphere in your daily work? 

I think my love of books is what drove me go work in a book-store when I was twenty, but also pushed me to pursue a career where I would be forever surrounded by text and reading. I did a lot of creative writing as a child but as I got older, I understood I don’t want words to be my medium. I have such immense respect for the written word; I slowly became paralyzed as a writer. Being an illustrator allowed me to still tell stories, and a lot of what I do is strongly connected to literature and language.

I feel lucky doing a lot of editorial work, because it allows me to learn about topics I never would’ve encountered otherwise. My work always starts with doing some research, visual as well as textual. In this regard I feel an illustrator needs to be a bit of a scholar, and I admit that this is one of my favorite parts of the job.

Is there a current project you would like to tell us more about?

I am now in the final stages of working on a book about mental illness, together with the nice people of Libros del Zorro Rojo, a Spanish publishing house. It will be an illustrated lexicon for adults, with my artwork being black-and-white lino prints. It started out as a university project in the Universität der Künste, Berlin, a few years ago, mostly because I needed a project-theme for a class I was taking in lino-cut and printmaking. It was the first time I tried lino-cut or made anything in black and white. But it became not only an exploration of the medium, but an exploration of my family’s history with mental illness and of other people around me. I harnessed the artistic process to discover more about things that were taboo or painful, and I have to say that dealing head-on with this complicated topic was anything but depressing—it felt like opening a window and letting sunlight into a room that was dark for too long.

You described yourself as a “curious illustrator.” Where do you find opportunities to practice curiosity and observation?

I think illustrators need to function as explorers and observers, in order to comment meaningfully on the societies and cultures they operate in. They need to develop skills such as eaves-dropping on strangers in the street or looking around in public transport instead of staring at their phone and opening dusty library books instead of google image search. All the best stories are already around us, and all the best design solutions too, we just need to train ourselves to look in the right places.

For me personally, I’ve always been a bit of an outsider and being an illustrator gives me the framework to explore the world with a sense of purpose. I will give a concrete example: I do not have a visual library in my head of how things look. I am not one of those artists who can draw everything from her head elegantly in one stroke. Every time I need to draw something, I find myself puzzled, thinking: what does this actually look like? And how would it look as a drawing? And how would it look like if I was the one drawing it? I am never sure of the answer in advance. And I think all this questioning keeps me on my toes, it makes sure I treat every illustration job as a riddle I have to solve. The world is a mystery to me, and illustration helps me make sense of it.

Do you enjoy and study the work of other artists?

Of course! And I envy a lot of other artists, too. I think artistic jealousy is a good motivation to improve one’s own craft. I find myself especially drawn to outsider-art, to creative expression that was made by people who did not necessarily call themselves artists. I think there is so much to learn from it, from the fresh and unexpected perspectives a lot of outsider art holds, to the mere fact many outsider-artists kept on creating for many years without ever being recognized for it in the traditional ways. It reminds me that art exists on a higher realm, that it can have little to do with money or professional success. And this reminder, when I think about artists like Henry Darger or Vivian Maier, is a big comfort to me.

Images from Bitch Media, Nobrow, The New York Times, and personal projects. Portrait photo by Uwe Fechner.