Wednesday, June 30, 2010

What's the place?

Since the early 1980s, a number of Chinese artists has managed to study or exhibit abroad, and from time to time international shows, especially in Europe, presented post-Mao work that suggested the rise of an avant-garde in the People's Republic. Most notably, in 1993 Andreas Schmid and Hans van Dijk (a Belgian, soon to become a pioneering organizer and archivist within China) curated China Avant-garde: Counter-currents in Art and Culture, a sixty-artist survey at the Haus der Kulturen de Welt in Berlin. Nearly a score of mainland Chinese painters appeared in a group show at the 1993 Venice Biennale, and a few others turned up in subsequent installments. The seminal 1993 exhibition China's New Art, Post-1989, organized by scholar-dealer Chang Tsong-zung (Johnson Chang) with critic Li Xianting, was documented by an English-language book that reached far beyond the show's original Hong Kong venues. And in 1997, shortly after the first progressive galleries opened on the mainland, Texas expatriate Robert Bernell began to offer hundreds of English-language articles and books on new Chinese art through his Beijing and Hong Kong-based website, bookstore, and publishing company, today called Timezone 8.
- New China, New Art

Click the album below to view the full Timezone8 2009 catalogue.

Monday, June 28, 2010

What's the word?

Certain vestiges of Old China have not been entirely lost, despite determined efforts to eradicate them in the middle of the last century. Folktales and ghost stories are still retold; animism and shamanism persist in guises such as non-empirical Chinese medicine, astrological charts, fortunetellers, marriage readers, and feng shui. The lunar calendar functions alongside the Gregorian. In temples, now treated as living museums, one still finds aged shrines to such beings as the Local Town God.
– New China New Art.

vestige (n): a trace of something that is disappearing or no longer exists.

Aquatic Garden




Fish/Animals
Hyphessobrycon herbertaxelrodi, Otocinclus Affinis, Blue Shrimp, Amano Shrimp

More information:

Friday, June 25, 2010

What's the word?

faux pas (noun): an embarrassing or tactless act or remark in a social situation.

I found this word from a spam in my Inbox today.
Dear Shannon, 

Having worked with designers for a few years now, I would have assumed you understood, despite our vague suggestions otherwise, we do not welcome constructive criticism. I don't come downstairs and tell you how to send text messages, log onto Facebook and look out of the window. I am willing to overlook this faux pas due to you no doubt being preoccupied with thoughts of Missy attempting to make her way home across busy intersections or being trapped in a drain as it slowly fills with water. I spent three days down a well once but that was just for fun. 
I have amended and attached the poster as per your instructions. 

Regards, David.

Thursday, June 24, 2010

What's the word?

myopia (noun): nearsightedness. lack of imagination, foresight, or intellectual insight.

I found this word in the book, New China New Art by Richard Vine.

Here is how the word used in the book.

Why was the Western art public so unaware of this well-developed phenomenon? And given what we recalled of pastwar events in the PRC–the decades of Maoist regimentation, the ideological hysteria of the Cultural Revolution, the bloody Tiananmen Square crackdown–how could it have happened? What had we missed, and what other marvels would the New China yield?

In large part, such wonder was due to our own myopia.

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

A living art



What you are seeing below is a massive home aquarium setup by Japanese enthusiastic aquarist. Just to give a sense of scale, click here to see how many people can fit inside the tank. What I like about this tank setup, apart from its obvious huge size, it is how lives under the water and above the water live in harmony, adding to that is the location of the tank, the juxtaposition of what is a recreation of nature that housed inside a man-made structure (ie. house) with the true natural landscape outside. This is one unforgettable find, and it is an art piece in a way, a living art piece should I say.

More information:

InDesign Magazine 36, June-July 2010

InDesign's Panels
Dingbats
InDesign Effects: Create a Carved-Wood Effect

Saturday, June 19, 2010

A Concise Graphic Design Chronology, Part 3

1958
Margaret Calvert
South African typographer and graphic designer Margaret Calvert, along with Jock Kimneir, designed many of the road signs used in Great Britain. The signs feature simple pictograms to inform people, such as using a cow to denote farm animals. She also created fonts for Linotype, including the eponymously titled Calvert.


1960s
Psychedelia and Pop Art
Culture went pop in the 1960s as music, art, literature and design became more accessible and reflective of everyday life. Purposely obvious and throwaway, pop art developed as a reaction against abstract art.

The psychedelia counter culture that developed during the same period fused different genres and mediums, breaking down traditional boundaries. Pictured is a Milton Glaser poster that features a Marcel Duchamp style silhouette combined with calligraphic swirls. Over six million were printed.


1961
Letraset
The creation of Letraset dry transfer lettering allowed anyone to become a typesetter. Rubbed directly onto artwork or virtually any substrate, it was often used to headlines and display type while body copy was supplied via a typewriter.


1976
Frutiger
Typographer Adrian Frutiger is prominent in the pantheon of typeface designers due to the grid numbering system he developed for Univers. Frutiger completed the expansion of the Frutiger font family in 1976, a project he began in 1968 while designing signage for the Charles de Gaule airport in Paris. Pictured is the character set of Frutiger that demonstrates the rounded forms and low stroke contrast of the font.


1977
I Love New York
Created by Milton Glaser, the iconic 'I Love New York' is one of the most famous and recognisable examples of a rebus. Its simplicity, balance and dramatic burst of red, combined with a rounded slab serif typeface, ensured its success.


1981
Bitstream
Founded in 1981 by Matthew Carter and Mike Parker. Bitstream was the first digital type foundry. The production of digital fonts further separated the type design from type manufacturers. The company developed Charter, which had open letterforms for low-resolution printers and created Verdana for screen use, with its curves, diagonals and straight lines rendered in pixel patterns, rather than drawn.


1981
The Face
Graphic designer Neville Brody revolutionised magazine design with his unabashed love of typography. This was nowhere more apparent than one the pages of The Face, a style magazine covering music, design and fashion. Old and contemporary type was exaggerated in scale and proportion, was exploded and distorted, and complemented with Brody's own computer-generated fonts as he challenged the notion of legibility.


1982
Completion of The Vietnam Veteran's Memorial Wall, Washington
The Vietnam Veteran's Memorial Wall is a monument that honours members of the US armed forces who served in the Vietnam Way. Comprising three parts, the wall is carved wih the names of all those that were killed in the conflict, and is the most recognised part of the memorial.


1984
Apple Mac
The 'Mac' revolutionised the personal computer by making computer screens user-friendly and hiding the operational programming from the user. Control in type production migrated away from professional typesetters to designers, and extended to amateurs as we as industry professionals. The low resolution of early personal computers called for new fonts to ensure legibility.


1985
Fontographer
Typeface customisation became available to anyone through the advent of the Fontographer design program, which allowed existing fonts to be manipulated and reshaped. Cheap Fontographer-produced fonts entering the market initially caused concerns for traditional typography companies, although this was tempered by the amount of work required to create an entirely new typeface.


1984
Emigré
American graphic design magazine Emigré was one of the first publications to use Macintosh computers, and influenced graphic designers to shift to desktop publishing (DTP). The magazine also served as a forum for typographical experimentation.


1990
New Wave
As the 1990s began, graphic designers reacted to the international style and sought to break away from the constraints of grid patterns in favour of experimentation, playful use of type and a more handmade approach. Type use became more subtle and expressive - to be part of the message rather than just its conveyor.

Friday, June 18, 2010

A Concise Graphic Design Chronology, Part 2

1916
Dadaism
An artistic and literary movement (1916-23) that developed following the First World War and sought to discover an authentic reality through the abolition of traditional culture and aesthetic forms. Dadaism brought new ideas, materials and directions, but with little uniformity. Its principles were of deliberate irrationality, anarchy and cynicism, and the rejection of laws of beauty. Dadaists lived in and for the moment. Pictured is the cover of the first edition of Dada, which was published in ZĂ¼rich in 1917 and edited by Tristan Tzara.


1916
De Stijl
Dutch for 'the style', De Stijl was an art and design movement that developed around a magazine of the same name founded by Theo Van Doesburg. De Stijl used strong rectangular forms, employed primary colours and celebrated asymmetrical compositions. Pictured is a the Red and Blue Chair, which was designed by Gerrit Rietveld.


1918
Constructivism
A modern art movement originating in Moscow in 1920, which was characterised by the use of industrial methods to create non-representational, often geometric objects. Russian constructivism was influential to modernism through its use of black and red sans-serif typography arranged in asymmetrical blocks. Pictured is a model of the Tatlin Tower, a monument for the Communist International.


1919
Bauhaus
The Bauhaus opened in 1919 under the direction of renowned architect Walter Gropius. Until it was forced to close in 1933, the Bauhaus sought to initiate a fresh approach to design following the First World War, with a stylistic focus on functionality rather than adornment.


1925
Herbert Bayer
Austrian graphic designer Herbert Bayer embodied the modernist desire to reduce designs to as few elements as possible, an repeatedly experimented with typography to reduce the alphabet to a single case. He created Universal, a geometric sans serif font. Pictured is Bayer Universal, a font that has an even stroke weight with low contrast and geometric forms.


1928
Jan Tschichold
German typographer Jan Tschichold was a leading advocate of Modernist design as expressed through Die neue Typographie (the new typography), which was a manifesto of modern design that promoted sans-serif fonts and non-centred design, in addition to outlining usage guidelines for different weights and sizes of type. Pictured is Sabon, a font named after Jacques Sabon that typifies the Modernist approach pioneered by Tschichold.


1928-1930
Gill Sans
Typographer Eric Gill studied under Edward Johnston and refined his Underground font into Gill Sans. This was a sans-serif font with classical proportions and graceful geometric characteristics that lend it a great versatility.


1931
Harry Beck
Graphic designer Harry Beck (1903-1974) created the London Underground map in 1931. An abstract work that bears little relation to physical scale, the stations are relatively evenly spaced as Beck focused on the user-defined needs of how to get from one station to another and where to change, rather than accurate and proportional representation.


1950s
International Style
International or Swiss style was based in the revolutionary principles of the 1920s such as De Stijl, Bauhaus and Die neue Typographie, and it became firmly established in the 1950s. Grids, mathematical principles, minimal decoration and sans-serif typography became the norm as typography evolved to represent universal usefulness more than personal expression.


1951
Festival of Britain
A national exhibition in London and locations around Britain that opened in May 1951. The festival was intended as 'a tonic for the Nation' as Britain sought to lift itself from the ruins of the Second World War. The festival also marked the centenary of the 1851 Great Exhibition.


1951
Helvetical
Created by Swiss designer Max Miedinger, Helvetica is one of the most famous and popular typefaces in the world. It has clean, no-nonsense shapes that are based on the Akzidenz-Grotesk font. Originally called Haas Grotesk, its name changed to Helvetica in 1960. The Helvetica family has 34 weights and the Neue Helvetica has 51.


1957
Vorm Gevers
Dutch graphic designer and typographer, Vorm Gevers is known for his posters and exhibition design for Amsterdam's Stedelijk Museum. Gevers designed several fonts, including New Alphabet (1967), which was an abstract front based on a dot-matrix system so that it could be easily read by computers.

A Concise Graphic Design Chronology, Part 1

1476
The Printing Press
English merchant and diplomat William Caxton introduced the printing press to England in 1476 and was the country's first printer. Amongst the achievements credited to Caxton is his standardisation of the English language by homogenising the regional dialects through the printed word, which also helped to expand English vocabulary.


1447
Moveable Type
Johannes Gutenberg (1398-1468) invented moveable type printing technology in 1447 with a press that was similar in design to those used in Germany's Rhineland to produce wine. This was a revolutionary development that allowed the mass production of books at relatively low cost, which formed part of an information explosion in Renaissance Europe.


1799
The Rosetta Stone
The stone, carved in 196BC with an inscription in Egyptian hieroglyphs, demotic and Greek, was found near Rosetta (Rashid) in 1799. The three scripts of the same text provided a valuable key that helped to decipher hieroglyphs.


1840
Penny Black
Create by Rowland Hill, the world's first postage stamp, the Penny Black, was issued in 1840 as part of the British postal service reforms, and was a means of prepaying the delivery of letters. The stamp featured the profile of Queen Victoria, the reigning monarch, and letters in its bottom corners referred to rows and columns, which indicated the stamp's position on the printed sheet, such as 'a', 'AB' or 'GD', as pictured here.


1851
The Great Exhibition
Held at London's Hyde Park between May and October 1851, and at the height of the Industrial Revolution, The Great Exhibition featured displays of culture and industry and celebrated industrial technology and design. The exhibition was housed in a glass and cast-iron structure, better-known as Crystal Palace, which was designed by Joseph Paxton.


1886
Linotype
Invented by Ottmar Mergenthaler in 1884, the line-casting machine produced a metal slug that contained a single line of type. Characters were input using a keyboard that was not dissimilar to a typewriter. The machine assembled brass character matrices into a line, which it then cast.


1886
Monotype
Tolbert Lanston developed a mechanical method of punching type from cold strips of metal, which were set (typeset) in Washington, USA. In 1896 Lanston patented the revolutionary monotype caster. It cast single letters in lead and composed them into a page. This allowed corrections to be made at the character level rather than having to recast a whole line, which had been the case previously with linotype.


1892
Aristide Bruant, Toulouse-Lautrec
French post-impressionist painter and art nouveau illustrator Henri Toulouse-Lautrec depicted in the seedy side of late nineteenth century Paris in paintings and posters that expressed a profound sympathy with humanity. Although lithography was invited in Austria by Alois Senefelder in 1796, Toulouse-Lautrec helped it accomplish the successful fusion of art and industry.


1896
Simplicissimus
Thomas Theodor Heine (1867-1948) another early proponent of lithography, co-founded and drew cover illustrations for German satirical magazine Simplicissimus. Heine's covers combined brash and politically daring content with a modern graphic style.


1850
The Industrial Revolution
The second of two phases of a major technological, socio-economic and cultural change that began in late eighteenth century Britain and saw the replacement of an economy based on manual labour with one dominated by industry and machine manufacture. The second phase began circa 1850 and saw the rise of the mechanical printing industry and its consequent demand for typefaces.


1910
Modernism
Modernism was shaped by the industrialisation and urbanisation of Western society. Modernists departed from the rural and provincial zeitgeist, prevalent in the Victorian era, rejecting its values and styles in favour of cosmopolitanism. Functionality and progress became key concerns in the attempt to move beyond the external physical representation of reality through experimentation in a struggle to define what should be considered 'modern'.


1916
Johnston Underground
This striking sans-serif font was created by Edward Johnston for use on the signage of the London Underground. Originally called Underground, it has also been called Johnston's Railway Tpye and Johnston, and features the double-storey 'g'.

Object Layer Options

Here is a good to explore the possibility with placed object in InDesign. I didn't know this! Awesome.

http://www.tonyharmer.co.uk/wordpress/?p=278

Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Bauhaus

An art and design school opened in 1919 under the direction of the renowned arcitect Walter Gropius. The baubau aimed to provide a fresh approach to design following the first world war. Bauhaus style is charateristic by economic and geometric forms. Teching staff include Paul Klee, Wassily Kandinsky and Marcel Breuer.

In 1923 Kandinsky proposed that there was a universal relationship between the three basic shapes and the three primary cours. He believed the yellow triangle to be the most active and dynamic through to the passive, cold, blue circle.

Avant Garde

An artistic work that pushes the established limits of what is considered acceptable. Avant garde works often have revolutionary, cultural, or political connotations.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Art Nouveau

Rooted in romanticism and symbolism, art nouveau (the new art) describes a richly ornamental style of decoration, architecture and art that developed during 1894-1914. Art nouveau is characterised by undulating lines, sinuous curves and the depiction of leaves, flowers and flowing vines and is embodied in the work of protagonists such as Gustav Klimt, Henru de Toulouse-Lautrec, Antonio Gaudi and Hector Guimard, who was the architect and designer of the Paris metro entraces.

Called Jugendstil (in Germany), Sezessionstil (in Austria), and Modernismo (in Spain), art nouveau rejected historical references in favour of creating a highly stylised design vocabulary that unified all arts around man and his life. Architecture was the focus for art nouveau as it naturally encompasses and integrates every art, but the style was also used extensively in posters and jewellery design. The ornate typeface used here is Benguiat.

Art Deco

Named after the 1925 Exposition Internationale des Arts Décoratifs et Industriels Modernes, which was held in Paris, Art Deco describes a decorative design style that celebrated the rise of technology and speed via geometric designs, intense colours, and the use of plastic and glass. Forms became streamlined as the principles of aerodynamics became better understood resulting in an elegant style in both architecture and objects.

Abstract Expressionism

An American art movement that developed in New York City following the Second World War, and featured forms not found in the natural world as a means of emotional expression. Abstract expressionist works were characterised by large canvases with uniform, unstructured coverings that projected power due to their scale. Leading figures in this movement include Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko and Clyfford Still.

Absolute & Relative Measurements

The two measurement systems used in typography:

Absolute measurements
a fixed value like mm, cm, m

Relative measurements
character spacing for example are directly linked to typesize which means that they are defined by a series of relative measurements, the em, is a relative measurement. Type set at 70pt has a 70pt em.